Fly Me To The Moon Old Settlers Arts and Crafts Old Settlers Parade
Transcription
Fly Me To The Moon Old Settlers Arts and Crafts Old Settlers Parade
A First Hand Account of Events on 9/11 Experienced by Herb and Audrey Wolfe By Audrey Wolfe I turned on my computer this morning and the date jumps out at me... September 11, 2012. What a flashback of memory that is. If it wasn't for our granddaughter, Gwen, I might not be writing this today. We had big plans to celebrate our 48th anniversary on September 5, 2001. We were living in Edgerton, Kansas and had moved into our custom-built home in March. We were retired and also had our home in Punta Gorda, Florida. Our plan was to spend a few days with relatives in Illinois. We would then move on toward friends in Pennsylvania. We would arrive at our daughter's home in Cheshire, Connecticut. From there we had reservations for a Greyhound Bus tour of New York, take in a Broadway show. Then drive to Washington, D.C., where we had tickets for a private tour through the White House with our Senator. Our daughter had just moved her family to Connecticut and all four, Glenda, Ken, and children Gwen and Brent were looking forward to showing us the sights. On September 10, Gwen looked at our plans to take the train from Cheshire to New York, catch the bus tour for breakfast at the Windows on the World Restaurant on the 110th Floor of the North tower of the World Trade Center. Gwen said, "Grandma, you guys are going to be so tired if you catch that early train tomorrow. Why don't you get a hotel in New Jersey today. Neither one of you have Olathe’s Only Locally Owned Newspaper For 35 Years been to New York and probably need to scope out how to get to the Port Authority. You'll get a good night’s sleep tonight and be fresh for your tour tomorrow." That did sound like a good idea. Glenda got on the phone and changed our tour reservations and then got online to find a motel close to the Hudson River. We were all set. After D.C., we would head down I-95 South for Florida. We are tooling along with really nice weather and the traffic wasn't too bad. That is, until we got to New York. What a mess! It was almost worse than Los Angeles. Herb tended to panic if he felt lost and he was beginning to panic. I'm scanning the map (no GPS in those days) and trying to remain calm. Herb is getting really nervous so I said, "Just turn right at this next corner" (and held my breath). He managed to get in the right lane, (Continued on Page 8) Fly Me To The Moon And Let Me Play Among the Stars By Joann LaCerte The pop standard Fly Me To The Moon, has lyrics that prompt many of us to dream of getting to travel to the moon. This ballad was composed by Bart Howard back in the 1950s and was initially recorded by Kaye Ballard in 1954. Then other great vocalists came out with their own renditions. Let's see now, there were Nat "King” Cole, Johnny Mathis, Tony Bennett and a host of other artists who jumped at the chance to record their memorable versions of this most appealing song. In fact, Tony Bennett rarely does a concert; without including Fly Me To The Moon because it's become one of his signature ballads - along with I Left My Heart In San Francisco. Let's just say that if he didn't sing it, his audiences would probably stand up and demand it to be sung as an encore! Bennett is a young 87 now - and still dazzling audiences, both young and old. He loves to record DVDs and CDs with other great vocalists such as Andrea Bocelli and Lady Ga Ga. .• When he sings about flying to the moon, he convinces us that's what he really wants to do. At the time, Bart Howard wrote a song about it, he had no idea it would actually happen just 15 years later. Realistically, did anyone believe man would ever walk on the moon - 238,857 miles from the earth? JFK’s Historic Speech On May 25, 1961, President John F. Kennedy delivered a famous speech many of us remember. He said, “First, I believe that this nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and returning him safely to earth. No single space project in this period will be more impressive to mankind, or more important for the long-range exploration of space; and none will be so difficult or expensive to accomplish." Those now-famous words of President John F. Kennedy, delivered in a speech before a joint-session of Congress, changed the world as we know it. President Kennedy's motivation for going to the moon was largely political. The United states was stunned and embarrassed in 1957 by the Soviet Union's launch of Sputnik, the first of a series of Soviet-made satellites to orbit the earth. And just a month before Kennedy's speech, the Soviet cosmonaut Yuri Gagarin became the first human in space, orbiting the earth and returning safely. (Continued on Page 9) Olathe’s Own Joe Tinoco To Appear at Old Settlers Born and raised in Olathe, this is where he honed his skills while attending Oregon Trail Junior High and Olathe North High School. His last Old Settlers performance was in 1990. Now, 23 years later, he finally had an open date that fits - and he is Olathe Bound! Among the ranks of superstars is Kansas' own SingerSongwriter-Producer -Dancer-Actor-All Around Entertainer Joe Tinoco. With incredible charisma, a powerful voice, the look and talent, he is definitely working his way to super stardom! Whether you see him on the big screen, live on stage, or on television, he is sure to light your fire! With a deep, rich, made for country voice - Joe has opened shows for many Country Music stars and legends, including: The Osmonds, The Oak Ridge Boys, Little Big Town, Ray Price, Continued on page 11) Joe, Tamra & Talya Will Perform at Old Settlers FREE September 1, 2013 Volume XXXVI Number 15 Coup ons o Advertising Hot Line 913-782-1133 or e mail us at jocogazette@gmail.com. We’re friendly! Old Settlers Arts and Crafts By Steve Baska Senior Contributing Editor The annual Old Settlers’ Arts and Crafts Fair has been successfully increasing the number of vendors and this year will be open on Thursday of Old Settlers’ weekend for the first time, said Pam Hall, chairman and coordinator of the fair. “We are happy to open on Thursday this year, instead of on Friday as in past years,” Pam said. “We talked about it for a while and saw no reason not to. It does shut down a parking lot one day earlier, but we got permission from the police and fire departments. In the past we’ve had people come to the festival on Thursday and ask where is the Arts and Crafts Fair and we’ve said it opens on Friday, but this year it will be open Thursday.” The fair is located in downtown Olathe near the courthouse and the carnival area of the Old Settlers’ event, to be held Sept. 5-7, on the corner of Santa Fe and Chestnut Streets. This is Pam’s ninth year as chairman and she has been driving to fairs in the Midwest to recruit new vendors to help rebuild the fair from a low of about 90 vendors several years ago. This year there will be about 108 booths open. There is space for a maximum of 120 booths. “I’ve been to fairs in Independence, Missouri; Branson, Topeka and Ft. Pam Hall with the help of her husband, Bob, and other volunteers put on the Arts and Crafts Show Scott to invite good vendors to join our fair,” she said. “And a few vendors had quit in recent years so we’ve asked them to come back and they’ve done that. The fair has become like a little family of vendors. They know each other by first names. We try to provide them good service. If you don’t do that, vendors can talk badly about a show and it can ruin the show, but ours is doing very well. We’ve got about an 80 percent return rate.” This year will feature several new vendors. A few of those are: “Keeper Stone,” a crafter who paints on flagstone; “It’s Sew Original,” a lady who hand sews purses with lots of pockets; and a ceiling tile crafter; a food vendor called “Taste of Mayhem” (Continued on Page 11) 3 Mistakes at Pearl Harbor From Tom Marsh Tour boats ferry people out to the USS Arizona Memorial in Hawaii every thirty minutes. We just missed a ferry and had to wait thirty minutes. I went into a small gift shop to kill time. In the gift shop, I purchased a small book entitled, "Reflections on Pearl Harbor " by Admiral Chester Nimitz. Sunday, December 7th, 1941 Admiral Chester Nimitz was attending a concert in Washington D.C. He was paged and told there was a phone call for him. When he answered the phone, it was President Franklin Delano Roosevelt on the phone. He told Admiral Nimitz that he (Nimitz) would now be the Commander of the Pacific Fleet. Admiral Nimitz flew to Hawaii to assume command of the Pacific Fleet. He landed at Pearl Harbor on Christmas Eve, 1941. There was such a spirit of despair, dejection and defeat - you would have thought the Japanese had already won the war. On Christmas Day, 1941, Adm. Nimitz was given a boat tour of the destruction wrought on Pearl Harbor by the Japanese. Big sunken battleships and navy vessels cluttered the waters every where you looked. As the tour boat returned to dock, the young helmsman of the boat asked, "Well Admiral, what do you think after seeing all this destruction?" Admiral Nimitz's reply shocked everyone within the sound of his voice. Admiral Nimitz said, "The Japanese (Continued on Page 4) Renaissance Festival Better Than Ever True Family Fun Just 12 Miles North on Hiway 7 By Robert Parrish MacLean For over 30 years now, there has been a fun family event in the woods just north of here. The Renaissance Festival returns on weekends beginning August 31 and runs until mid-October. They are also open Labor Day and Columbus Day. And this year they have a couple of new food items I couldn’t get enough of during a sneak preview on August 21. Be sure to try the Bacon, Lettuce and Tomato Hot Dog with shredded cheese. They also have a new, huge Angus burger that is bigger than the bun, with all the fixin’s. Try a Scotch Egg – it’s some kind of deep fried Will Peterson, Bryant Upjohn, and Jim Peterson. Jim and Will bring you the Renaissance Festival each year. hard-boiled egg. I haven’t had one but I’d like to. You’ll find 23 stage acts, 22 musical groups, 13 historical exhibitors, many entertainers and crafts people and more food than you can imagine. Children can ride an elephant or a camel, smaller children can create toys or have their faces painted. There are amazing people-powered rides for the kids – they’re as much fun as a motorized carnival. I got to ride some since there were few kids that day. The easy part is that The Renaissance Festival is just 12 miles straight up K7 Highway out of Olathe. You pass over I-70 and immediately you see Feldman’s Farm & Home Store and a Quik-Trip. Turn right there and go up the hill. Bingo! Or, rather, Huzzah! You’re there. (Continued on Page 11) Duck Nation Has Spoken: Duck Dynasty Poised To Be Biggest Cable Show of all Time By Maria Elena Fernandez It’s a Duck Nation, and we’re all just living in it. Last week, A&E Network’s reality show “Duck Dynasty” catapulted to become the biggest unscripted show in cable history with its fourth season premiere. With nearly 11.8 million viewers, the show about a Louisiana family that has made millions from its duck call fabrication business is on the brink of toppling “The Walking Dead.” If it does, it will become cable's biggest show. The A&E Network, as Duck Commander patriarch Phil Robertson would say, is “Happy, happy, happy.” The show premiered in March 2012 and finished its first cycle with an average 1.3 million viewers, according to data provided by Nielsen. By its third season finale, an average 8.4 million people were tuning in to hear Phil saying things like, “Ducks are like women. They don’t like a lot of mud on their butts,” and Uncle Si explaining the many uses of the word “Hey.” Has "Duck" reached its peak audience? There's no way to know, but the network's executives aren't betting against it. “I’m a superstitious man so I don’t make [ratings] predictions,” said David McKillop, A&E’s general manager and executive vice president. “But do I think we’ve found the ceiling yet? I don’t know but I don’t think so. We have some fun episodes coming (Continued on Page 11) In Memorium: Marieann Rose Koehler, 72, Expires 12-31-13 Exp.12-31-13 Exp12-31-13 of Roeland Park, Kansas, passed away peacefully. Marieann was born June 2 1941 to Gerald J. and Rosetta Altman in Kansas City. She attended St. Peters Grade School and Hogan High School. She graduated with a BS Degree from Avila (College of St. Teresa). She worked as a Dietitian at St. Margaret's and St. Luke's Hospitals. Marieann worked for the new Research Hospital with cooperation of Midwest Research Institute to transition the Dietary Department onto data systems, the first in the city. Later all hospitals followed the program she helped launch. On July 29, 1962 she married the love of her life Vince Koehler, Sr. and joined St. Agnes Parish where they raised their family in the Catholic faith. Marieann lived the vocation of wife and mother while selflessly volunteering and participating in organizations; PTO, School Board, Church Activities Committee, Altar Society, Fish Fry Chairman, President of Bishop Miege Mothers Club, Rockhurst Circle, St. Agnes Choir, Sewing Circle, Cub Scout Den Mother, Homeroom Mother, and German American Club of America, many film clubs, plus grandmother for 2 I grandkids. Marieann Rose Koehler Marieann loved to cook, garden, sew and spend time with her family and friends. Marieann was closely involved with her husband's hobby producing a cable show for 15 years called "Entertainment Spectrum" EntertainmentSpectrum.com and writing columns for the Johnson’s County Gazette and other local papers with Vince. Marieann accompanied Vince to countless movies, plays and concerts while working behind the scenes to finalize articles and shows. After her husband passed away Marieann wrote columns for The Gazette. n Pag e3 See us at www.jocogazette.com Old Settlers Parade Planning Is A Major Undertaking By Steve Baska Senior Contributing Editor What is it like to be in charge of the largest parade in Kansas? Just ask Sheila Reitmeyer, coordinator of the Johnson County Old Settlers Parade, to be held Saturday, Sept. 7 this year in downtown Olathe. Sheila has been the coordinator for 20 years and she still enjoys it. “The parade has grown since I began in 1993 and we’ve got most of the glitches out,” she said. “The only thing hard is explaining to people (who have entries in the parade) why they need insurance to enter.” Sheila, who owns Silvers Jewelry in Olathe, volunteers her time as coordinator. In fact, all the folks on the Old Settlers Committee are volunteers. Parade entries are coming in well ahead of the August 28 deadline this year, which helps Sheila plan better. “We’ve had up to 170 entries in some years, but that was too many, there was not room for everyone, so we try to limit it to 160. This year we will have about 140 to 145 because this is not an election year, so we have fewer politicians in the parade.” There will Sheila Reitmeyer, JCOS Secretary is Parade Coordinator be several new entries, she estimated, and many of the regular entries, such as the school bands. “People really love the bands,” she said. “”And this year we will have the Kansas National Guard Band, which comes about every two or three years. There have also been a lot more floats in recent years. I think that is because of the themes we have. People can build a float to match our theme. This year’s theme is “Once Upon a Time,” so it is about fairy tales, Cinderella (Continued on Page 9) Five Reasons to Listen Well By Justin Meyer 1) No one likes to be interrupted. I cannot tell you the number of times I have interrupted one of my poor brothers (sorry, Tyler) or sisters at home. As an extrovert, and a guy with a voice that carries well, I often do not even notice when they're trying to share their own opinion, or stories. Lately, I've been learning more and more the importance of listening well and sharing the floor with others. 2) You'll learn more about yourself than you thought. As I've tempered my behavior and attempted to listen better at home to my siblings and out in public, I've come to realize how easy it is to fall into the trap of simply waiting for my own turn to talk. "Uh-huh", "yeah", "I see what you're saying", are not only conversational fillers (a necessary evil), but they've become a cloak for often not actually paying attention to what the other individual is saying. The truth is, what you have to say CAN wait, and it probably isn't nearly as important as what they've been trying to tell you for the last five minutes while your eyes were "glazed over", as my Dad would say. 3) You may actually become friends with someone. Do you remember watching clips of old TV shows and movies with your grandparents? And how many of those shows could be based on typical conversations among friends, or even interactions with strangers, in places like a diner, a bar, and so on? Well, what happened to that? You'll surprise (Continued on Page 5) Event Stage Opened by Olathe Vet and Son By Steve Baska Senior Contributing Editor A new stage and amphitheater in five acres of cedar timber have been opened for concerts, weddings and parties by Olathe veterinarian Hadley Warwick and his son Peyton, who manages the business. The amphitheater, called The Sticks, is on the Warwick’s V-Bar-T Ranch, a few miles south of Lawrence, Kansas. The 80-acre ranch also has a 65-acre lake. The first event at the amphitheater was a concert in June that drew about 600 people to hear country music duo Walker McGuire in concert. “The Kansas City area is lacking in venues like this,” said Peyton Warwick, “so we are excited to be offering this. The stage is 16 by 24 feet and four feet high. The audience sits on hay bales and enjoys a beautiful outdoor venue. “The idea began about last Christmas when my dad said we should develop a way to monetize the farm to help ensure that it can stay in our family for many years,” Peyton said. “So we cut down about 50 trees and did a lot of work to develop this as a beautiful outdoor venue that can be rented. We put lights on the trees near the stage and created a great setting. ”Peyton said upcoming events this Fall include a charity fundraiser for a KU student facing large medical bills, and a private party by a Kansas State University fraternity. Weddings and concerts will also be a primary focus of bookings. A large tent on the site provides weather cover, and port-a-potties provide restroom facilities. Rental costs vary from $200 to $2,000 depending on the services needed by the customer. “In the future we plan to build a large barn to be used for year-round shelter and where weddings could occur,” said Peyton, 24, who attended Shawnee Mission East High School and the University of Rhode Island, where he had a soccer scholarship. His full-time job now is as a headhunter for an information technology firm, and as side businesses he does private goal keeping training sessions for clients, and is manager of the amphitheater. “It’s a dream of mine to be my own boss. My dad is his own (Continued on Page 4) Page 2 Johnson’s County Gazette September 1, 2013 In our 36th Year Serving Olathe and Southern Johnson County From The Publisher From The Publisher appears in every issue of the GAZETTE in order to bring you information Keith Johnson about Olathe; its people, businesses, activities and events of interest to you. We invite your contributions to this column. We hope you will consider our advertisers when you are in need of their products or services. 782-1133 Old Settlers Update Sept. 5,6,7 Only a few commercial booths left for Old Settlers. A great way, the only way, to promote your business, club or organization to tens of thousands of area residents. Parade (782-5551) is the same way. Get tons of publicity. See articles on commercial (7825254), arts & crafts booths (7684454), elsewhere in paper. There are no food booth spaces left, sorry. They go fast and are only for NON-profit groups. For them it is usually their only fundraiser for the whole year. Advertising says Handicapped Parking is at 105 S. Loula, they mean 105 E. Loula in the McGilley-Frye Funeral Home lot. Do NOT bring dogs (except service and seeing-eye dogs to Old Settlers). You will be asked to leave. NO bicycles or guns either, please. Pam Hall, recruiter for the Old Settlers Arts & Crafts says her show this year will be the best one in a long time. Many new vendors. Storage Wars See Sale Bill for sale information in Olathe on September 14 on West Dennis, just west of west tracks. A & E’s Storage Wars TV show can sometimes be entertaining, if you like estate, garage, and church sales. Comical and eccentric regulars Barry, Darrell, Jarrod and Brandi, auctioneers Dan and Laura, and the Harris Brothers compete with each other for abandoned California-based storage lockers that mostly yield junk, but infrequently have treasures worth thousands. Ann is sick of it, but I like it. After a while they get repetitive, I guess, but still fun. The drama, when the doors are pulled up and the scavenged finds are uncovered, can be curious and surprising. Poster Lovers Old settlers posters and flyers Thank you to the many kind, unselfish merchants and managers who let us put up posters for the nonprofit Old Settlers. The fifty member all volunteer committee puts on a show that enables scores of charitable organizations, plus area craft vendors. They put on a great parade, arts and crafts event, car show, concerts, carnival, commercial booths, nationally known entertainment and great food. Don’t miss it. Giving Back to the One Who Brung Ya. Hisses and boos to you selfish (intimidated by your district manager?) establishments, (mostly) chain stores, who won't even allow posters and flyers for Olathe's only annual city wide celebration (100,000 attend over three days). Most greedy corporate big shot managers won't even allow a poster for the event, which is basically a local community non-profit fund raiser, to be placed on a wall or window in their stores. Shame on them. You love to take our money home to your corporate treasuries, but you can’t even let us put up a sign in your establishment to support the community? KEJ Thanks to all the Price Choppers, Hy-Vees and Hen Houses who let us put up Old Settlers signs but not the Wal-Marts or Targets or Home Depots or Lowe’s or the many chain restaurants, who wouldn’t even consider us. Corporate policies make me kind of angry. . Gazette Humor From Walt Jerry There was a bit of confusion at Ace Hardware this morning. When I was ready to pay for my purchases of gun powder and bullets the cashier said, "Strip down, facing me." Making a mental note to complain to Fox News about the gun registry people running amok, I did just as she had instructed. When the hysterical shrieking and alarms finally subsided, I found out that she was referring to my credit card. I have been asked to shop elsewhere in the future. They need to make their instructions to us seniors a little clearer! Care prayer, concern Bill Belcher, Phyllis Mackison, Bob & Mary Louise Beltz, Grace Moody, Jack Bernard, Molly Hammond, Maron Moore, Glena Ewing, Marianne Noll, Greg Crawford, Gary DeVault, Keilly family, Ron Hinkle, Dorothy Russell, Norman Voigts, Mark Duck, Irish Lubberts, Rita Hoffman, Lindy Darby, Olathe, Beautiful Shawnee Indian Word Whoever is maintaining the huge, beautiful hanging flower baskets downtown Olathe is doing a marvelous job. Ann loves them. We know how much work, watering, pruning, etc takes to keep these baskets looking good, especially in this plains state’s heat and wind. If we knew their names, we'd print them. Thank you for some badly needed area beautification. Along with Bob Millbern’s Flags, they make for a nice treat. Anxious to see how the two downtown landscaped areas off Santa Fe look when done. Olathe has a mediocre track record for improving the downtown, dating back from the Urban Renewal debacle in the 60’s. Landmarks like the Masonic Lodge, the Carnegie Library (donated by industrialist Andrew Carnegie), a few iconic churches, were leveled to make ugly parking lots and a tawdry fountain at Park and Cherry. African Americans’ Plight By some estimates over the last one hundred and fifty years more than 3,400 African Americans have been lynched (hanged without a trial) in US according to Glen Beck. Is it no wonder they feel paranoid about their discrimination? Oprah was victim of discrimination when she was insulted by a high end women’s fashion boutique in Zurich, Switzerland. Ann and I were there, also in Zurich in ’72 on our honeymoon, buying souvenir Swiss watches and we felt like we were treated rudely, too. The Swiss love our money, anyone’s money, but they have a definite superiority complex. Oprah wanted to see and hold a $35,000 Tom Ford item, “No you can't see the purse, you can't afford it,” the clerk blurted rudely. “Her demeanor, her weight, her dress, her hair, jewelry did not connote money. She was not with a rich-looking suitor. She was not recognized as a celebrity. If she had been, it would have been a different story.” Shorts A favorite lunch of mine at Old Settlers is the one after the Parade at First Christian Church. 200 E. Loula, see ad this issue. ** Got problems with your kids learning? There is a web site Khanacademy.com that offers free schoolwork help on many different topics. It was on 60 Minutes and a recent Tip of the Day, from Bill O’Reilly. Olathe People Did adventurous fun seekers, Linda and Bob Wilhelm really drive 18k miles around the USA over the last few months? That seems impossible. He has to be kidding.** How is Marion Eisele doing in the nursing home? ** Lisa at Hy-Vee is working on a story for us on a 40 year-long veteran employee there. Will miss the Santa Fe Hy-Vee when it closes and re-opens as the 152nd and BlackBob mega store later this year or early next year. We have heard that it will be bigger, fancier than the new HyVee at 95th and Antioch. but beware, the prices seem to be higher in the mega stores though the experience of shopping there is like going to Disneyland. Passing on Coke, Pepsi Intelligent people with any selfcontrol at all have cut way back on Coke and Pepsi products. It’s the sugar. I predict restaurants will have to start charging something for a glass of water, no free water anymore. Their profits were tied so much to the soft drinks which are about 90% profit. Think about it, a little syrup and soda and $1.99 for a small Coke. Think about the movie theaters, the Chiefs and the Royals, how much profit there is there where small soft drinks are $5 or more. Speaking of that, what a rip-off to not be able to take anything into the sports team stadia anymore. Under the welcomed guise of security, they say, they have forced you to limit take-in items to the non-drink (water maybe) non-food items you can squeeze into a clear 12-inch square transparent bag. To have to pay those exorbitant prices is obscenely painful. Loved the great sandwiches Aunt Pinky used to make for Phil, Scott and me to take to the Chiefs games. No more carry-in food. Can’t afford to buy food there. Chiefs tickets and parking are sky high. Hey, we’re not going. They priced us right out of the market. Wasting Food Growing up with parents who lived through the Great Depression, 19291941, I was taught you do not waste food. Even today, it really grates on me that you see such waste today. Some say half of our food stuffs are wasted. Think about what you throw away. If Ann does so, she doesn’t let me know. She knows it irritates me. So when I was at a local BBQ and saw an overly generous and doting grandpa at the next table lavish his grandkids with huge barbecue sandwiches, fries and drinks, I was curious. They came after I did and left before me. I knew what would happen. The kids ate only half, left the rest for waste and garbage. Why didn't he ask for a box and take it home or split one order for two kids? Hungry souls would kill for this and he wastes it, half of it. Servers tell me only half of their customers take food home with them. It’s sad, it takes little or no effort to ask for a box, carry it out, fridge it and have it for lunch or dinner a few nights hence. No wonder so many have no money at the end of the month, they have no sense of thrift. It has to be learned. Ouch In recent survey Kansas, our State, got Ugliest State, Louisiana the Drunkest state, Texas the state that should be kicked out of Union. Source” WDAF Fox 4 News. I think Kansas is beautiful. No mountains, oceans or Great Lakes, but still pretty cool. We don’t have earthquakes, hurricanes, avalanches, quicksand, or tidal waves. Knock on wood. LOL. Tid Bits Watch out who you shack up with. Average bachelor only changes, his sheets quarterly. That's once every three months. ** Maybe you should make it a home game. Fox 4 says researchers say you eat healthier, when your team wins, eat poorly, when it loses. We eat more comfort foods, sugars, fats etc. to feel better about losing. When our team wins, it boosts fans’ self-control. Fox 4 ** Texas Governor Rick Perry on TV ads actively recruiting Missouri businesses to leave and go to Texas. Another commercial blasts Missouri governor Nixon for vetoing a big tax cut for wealthy Missourians. 980 AM Olathe People After 40 Years Ruby Appears Recently seen at OMC was very nice friendly full blooded Hawaiian (they’re not many of them) Ruby Rauschenburg, who was nanny over 25 years ago for Mark and Diane Yasuhara, the Hawaiian Chrisitan singing couple. They had two daughters and a son. Together, they had a 20 year singing ministry. They sang as The Hawaiians at First Presbyterian of Olathe in the 1970’s when Bob Baxter was minister. They retired in the 1990’s and since then Mark has continued his ministry as leader of a large church choir in Honolulu. Charles Farley Book Signing at Great Mall Saturday, Sep 7 1-4 pm Sarasota, Florida, September 1, 2013—Pineapple Press announced today the publication of Secrets of St. Vincent, the second book in its popular Florida Secrets trilogy by awardwinning author Charles Farley. Farley will sign his books at The Great Mall Book Warehouse Sep 7 1-4 pm in Olathe, where he also celebrates his Olathe HS 50th Class Reunion. The first book, Secrets of San Blas, is based on events surrounding an actual murder at the Cape San Blas Lighthouse near Port St. Joe, Florida, in 1938. Old Doc Berber, Port St. Joe’s only general practitioner, is dragged into a murder investigation, a romance, and a series of intrigues that even he can’t diagnose. Michael Lister, author of The Big Goodbye, called the novel “an unforgettable journey through Florida’s Forgotten Coast . . . a delightful dance of history and mystery, an intriguing interplay of fact and fiction.” Now, in Secrets of St. Vincent, bluesman Reggie Robinson has been wrongly arrested for the gruesome murder of Sheriff Byrd “Dog” Batson. Doc Berber and his best friend, Gator Mica, mount a quixotic search for the sheriff ’s savage killer on equally savage St. Vincent Island. If they survive the frightening adventure, they’ll return with the shocking secrets that will shatter the town’s tranquility forever Mary Cochran’s 90th Mary Cochran will celebrate her 90th Birthday with an Open House on September 29, 2013 at the First Presbyterian Church, Lee and Hershey Streets, Olathe, Kansas from 2:30pm until 4:30pm in the afternoon. She is looking forward to your presence. Keep This Paper Handy Old Settlers Schedule of Events Press Time Participant Listings Don’t Forget See Page 3 Don’t forget the Flower Show at Old Settlers in City Hall Friday Sep , 6 1-8 pm and the Car Show north of City Hall on Saturday, Sep 7. 9-3. Don’t forget Register as an Old Settler, Saturday 9-4 at McGilley & Frye Funeral Home, GabFest 12-4 ** Olathe Community Orchestra Concert Friday, 6 pm and Olathe Civic Band Saturday 5 pm, see schedule on page 3.Don’t forget the pie and ice cream at the Ice Cream Socials May Help Flooding The city is working on College Way and Lindenwood Road area that has flooded repeatedly. A new bridge may be built and a stretch of Lindenwood, just east of College Way, will be raised several feet. Did not cost college anything according to Rev. Dan Vanderpool, College Church Pastor. Will help a little on flooding upstream where I own a home off Winterbrook, I hope. Old Settlers Booths Nearly Gone At Press Time there were only a few left, a booth of your own at Old Settlers, September 5,6,7 in downtown Olathe. There are fees and you must have proof of insurance, no exceptions. See more information at johnsoncountyoldsettlers.org For commercial booths, contact Jay or Justin Lang at 782-5254. These sell out fast, so act fast. Only a few left at press time. $375 w/electricity. 10’ x 10’. See list in this issue. For arts & crafts booths contact Pam Hall 768-4454. 816-835-2391. Cost is $150 limited to 120 booths. There are no food booth locations available. See list in this issue. Old Settlers Parade To be in Kansas longest and greatest parade, Saturday, September 6 at 10 a.m. downtown Olathe, contact Sheila Reitmeyer at 782-5551. See the At Press Time List of parade entries in this issue. Parade theme is Once Upon a Time. It is FREE for non-proift entries. All must have proof of insurance. $40 for walking entrees, $67 for vehicles, $103 for horses (insurance). Prizes are given. 65-75,000 people along parade route. 16 bands from high and middle schools. There is a fee and you must have proof of insurance. See johnsoncountyoldsettlers.org Honoring Bill Harralson After coaching youth baseball, basketball and football for over 60 years Olathean Bill Harralson has been honored with the naming of an Olathe Baseball field in his honor. It will be Bill Harralson Field. A hearty thanks and congratulations!! Murdering for Fun Music and Videos Make It Sound, Look So Cool Handsome, kind and genteel Christopher Lane, 23, was a gifted charming and loving Australian baseball player who came up to Oklahoma to play for a college in Duncan, Oklahoma, a decent community not known for crime. YoYo’s and parking meters are made there. Chris was jogging one day in broad daylight. At the same time, three teens were ‘bored’, needed a ‘thrill kill’ and decided to go kill someone. The killer said on his Facebook, “90% of whites are nasty.” After years of singing along to rap songs that say it’s good to kill cops and whites and making fun with killing games on videos, they acted out their fantasies. Inspired by Gangsta rap where killing is glorified, they got a couple of guns and murdered (with shots to his back) this defenseless being. Imagine being the parents of these monsters or the family and friends of the Australian. The civilized world must think we have gone insane here. What a sick, sick culture that allows the music, permits the videos, fosters the bad parenting, makes guns easily available and it’s getting worse, much worse, every single day. We ban kiddie porn, why not these poisons? It’ll be another excuse for the leftists to say, “Okay, take away all the guns from the law-abiding and those who hunt (or just want protection from these gangsta rap loving monsters)” Watch yourself and your loved ones, they may come for you next. Air Force Airman 1st Class Michael R. Pate graduated from basic military training at Joint Base San AntonioLackland, San Antonio, Texas. Airmen who complete basic training earn four credits toward an associate in applied science degree through the Community College of the Air Force. Pate is the son of Lisa Pate of West 123rd Street, Olathe, Kan., and Danny Pate of Briggs Street, Omaha, Neb. He is a 2009 graduate of Olathe East High School, Kan. Hey Mom, Here’s An Idea: Price Chopper Field Trips Available in Olathe Looking for a trip for your Cubs, Brownies, 4-H, Scouts? Here’s an idea. Back to School Educational and Fun Field trips are available in Olathe. Price Chopper welcomes all age groups. Show the kids what it takes to get our food on the shelves. Contact Tricia or George by phone or in store, we will gladly schedule a tour. 2101 E. Santa Fe Olathe, Kansas, off Mur-Len. 913-764-7300 Marieann Koehler September 1, 2013 Johnson’s County Gazette Olathe’s Paper for 35 Years Page 3 Buy Any Chicken Combo Get $1.00 OFF Dear Keith, Thank you for the extra copies of the paper, which I read faithfully. We Olatheans are so lucky to have your paper in town. It’s the best. Deana McClure Pub. Note: Thanks for the ‘love letter’ Mrs. McClure, your note makes up for the ‘kind, thoughtful’ souls who used to throw it back at us when we went back up a cul-de-sac. We no longer throw papers, so we don’t experience that anymore. KEJ Expires Sept. 30, 2013 Join Our e-club To Get FREE Monthly Backyard Favorites Visit us at www.backyardburgers.com/eclub Olathe People Erma Mae Hinkle loves the Gazette a lot, She reads on-line, friend of Jan Clark.** Emily Baker Administrator of the Olathe Public Library says they just had their one-millionth computer search. *** Esteemed Olathe veterinarian Dr. Mark Romain has retired after 31 years. Is an Air Force Academy graduate, engineer and veterinarian. ***How is Doc Wollen doing, heard he was not well? Texting Contagious I Knew It Would Happen Dept. Professors at Angelina College seeing students in essays using text slang ‘omg’ ‘lol’ ‘Ppl’ ‘r u’ ‘ofl’ ‘2 much for Oh my gosh, laughing out loud, people, are you and on the floor laughing, and too much. Source: Dana and Parks Expires Sept. 30, 2013 Tuesdays: Kids Eat for 99 Cents with purchase of a Combo - Valid after 4:00 p.m. Dear Keith Kudos to Justin Meyers for his article “Where are the real gentlemen of this world?” Thank you for calling attention to his opinion piece by running it on the front page August 1st. Mr. Meyers needs to be applauded and encouraged for his brave stand and moral convictions. The out of wedlock birthrate and refusal of men to support their children is one of the main reasons for the breakdown of American society. Praise God for real men like Mr. Meyers who have the courage to stand up for young women who demand marriage and total commitment first. We admire and praise young men who respect women enough to wait. Sincerely, Jerry and Madonna Wilson Spring Hill, Kansas Grief Recovery From Rebecca Thesman GateWay of Hope Ministries offers the Grief Recovery Program, for women who are suffering from any type of loss. This eight week program covers topics such as the Relational Graph for Grief, How to Complete Griefs from Your Childhood and How to Forgive Those Who Have Caused Your Loss. Participants will receive "The Grief Recovery Handbook" and the support of a group where they can honestly express their anger and pain. With a value of $217, this eight week program costs only $15 for the Registration Fee. Call GateWay today at 913.393.4283 to reserve your place. Openings are limited. The 1st session begins Tuesday, Sept. 10th at 6:30pm. Expires Sept. 30, 2013 Junior Combo Meal $4.79 Old Settlers Must Dos Eat a Grange Pup, ** Walk thru Commerical Booths ** Enjoy the Ice Cream Socials ** Stop at Info Booth, say Hi to Betty, Beth, Ann, Nancy, Lisa, Ed, Carlotta, Marty, Keith ** Visit Arts & Crafts Booths ** Watch the Parade, Sat. at 10 a.m. (be there by 9 a.m) ** Listen to the Civic Band/ Orchestra ** Listen to Free Concerts ** See the Olathe Then and Now slide show by Ken Roberts **See old high school buddies. ** Listen to High School Bands. ** Get a Grange Pup again. ** Get some Kettle Corn ** Say ‘hi’ to Doc Wollen ** Eat a Walkin’ Taco ** Eat in the shade. ** People Watch ** See Jay’s Bubble Machine ** Ride a Carnival Ride. ** See Miss Sweet Six Contest. ** Horseshoe Pitching. **Eat Brats, Olathe Youth Sports Pizza, Burgers, Cotton Candy, Drinks, Lemonade, ** Visit the Car Show. Briefs A belated Happy Birthday this month to Joann LaCerte and Gary DeVault. ** Well kept secret, guess I’m the last one to know, but there is an Ace Hardware now in the Arbor Creek Shopping Center, 159th and BlackBob. I have to go see these guys. Good luck with the new store. ** The woman who tragically lost her life in a fire Friday, Aug. 16 off Mur_Len at 155th has been identified as Patricia Partridge, age 55, of Olathe. ** Bigoerxia (CBS New York) — It has often been perceived that women are constantly fixated on their diets. Now, a growing number of men have become obsessed with “bulking up.” The new trend has been called “bigorexia” and it could come with some serious health consequences. Early in his career, personal trainer Alfonso Moretti was obsessed with building his own muscles. “It takes over your life. Every decision you make becomes the workout and how your body looks. I used to track and weigh every single ounce of food that went in my body. I used to wake up at 3 o’clock in the morning to drink protein shakes. I never missed a workout, ever, ever, ever,” he told CBS 2′s Maurice Dubois. As many as 45-percent of men have fallen victim to bigorexia or muscle dysmorphia, according to Dr. Michele Kerulis the director of sports & health psychology at the Adler School of Professional Psychology. “I can remember as young as 13 or 14, looking at some of these muscle magazines, and I was conditioned to think that’s what a man looked like. Big shoulders, big legs, just big muscles with veins everywhere,” Moretti said. The emotional impact can be devastating. Camp Creek Farms of Olathe Awarded Top Animal Welfare Certification Local farm uses sustainable agriculture methods to earn Animal Welfare Approved Certification The flock of laying hens at Camp Creek Farms is now certified as Animal Welfare Approved. This certification and food label lets consumers know that these animals were raised in accordance with the highest animal welfare standards in the U.S., using sustainable agriculture methods on an independent family farm. Like other AWA farmers across the country, Rick and Cindy Newson recognize the growing consumer interest in how animals are being raised. Raising animals outdoors on pasture or range has known benefits for animals, consumers, and the environment. Camp Creek Farms was founded in 2003 and is now a thriving, Animal Welfare Approved laying hen operation, supplying fresh, pastureraised eggs to the local community. The Newson's flock consists of a variety of traditional breeds, which produce nutritional and flavorful eggs. Scientific research shows that pasture-raised eggs contain three times as much Vitamin E, seven times more beta-carotene and twice the amount of Omega 3 fatty acids as industrial eggs. AWA Program Director Andrew Gunther says, "The accountability and integrity offered by Animal Welfare Approved farmers like Rick and Cindy are unmatched in food production. We're glad to have Camp Creek Farms in the AWA family." Pasture-raised eggs are available direct from Camp Creek Farms, as well as the Olathe Farmers' Market. For more information, email Rick at rwn45@embarqmail.com. TV Destroys Children, Duh The American Academy of Pediatrics recommends children aged two and older watch no more than two hours of television per day. They also recommend that children under two watch no television at all. According to a new study, even one hour more a day can diminish a preschooler’s vocabulary and math skills as well as classroom attention. “Every hourly increase in daily television watching from two-and-ahalf years old is also associated with bullying by classmates, and physical prowess at kindergarten,” Professor Linda Pagani of the University of Montreal and the CHU Sainte-Justine children’s hospital said in the study. At that young age, a child’s brain is wired to play. “These kids are watching too much television at a time when they should be out there in the environment exploring and interacting, especially with other humans,” Pagani added in the study. Watching television does not teach a child social or motor skills. “If you don’t learn those skills, you get to kindergarten and cry every time someone takes your toy,” Pagani said in the study. The study involved 991 girls and 1,006 boys in Quebec. Their parents reported their television viewing behavior as part of the Quebec Longitudinal Study of Child Development. Gazette Humor From Kathy Crumrine Just before the funeral services, the undertaker came up to the very elderly widow and asked, 'How old was your husband?' '98,' she replied: 'Two years older than me' 'So you're 96,' the undertaker commented. She responded, 'Hardly worth going home, is it?' Reporters interviewing a 104-year-old woman: 'And what do you think is the best thing about being 104?' the reporter asked. She simply replied, 'No peer pressure.' An elderly woman decided to prepare her will and told her preacher she had two final requests. First, she wanted to be cremated, and second, she wanted her ashes scattered over Wal-Mart. 'Wal-Mart?' the preacher exclaimed. 'Why Wal-Mart?' 'Then I'll be sure my daughters visit me twice a week.' Page 4 Johnson’s County Gazette Olathe’s Very Own Newspaper for 35 Years September 1, 2013 Other Sheep Ministries By Rev. Carl Erwin Kidding There is danger in us kidding ourselves by saying everything is alright, when in reality, the facts reveal the opposite. We say, when someone says something that is far-fetched, "You must be kidding" or "I don't think so." Positive thinking is good for us and we should be that way most of the time because we have hope of things getting better. But there comes the time when we have to face the facts and do something to make it better. We dare not kid ourselves, close our eyes, cover up our ears and close our mouth when they should be open to the real truth. Before World War II, there was talk of peace by everyone, but in fact, war was being planned and Pearl Harbor was bombed by our enemies. In the family we dare not kid ourselves when we know things are Rev. Carl Erwin falling apart. We need to stop kidding ourselves and do what we can to fix things. First, by going to God and the Bible (God's Book), pray together, get Christian counseling and be faithful in times of worship at church. The church (God's called out people) can kid themselves about the happenings in their midst. The Bible speaks of a great falling away. We must not kid ourselves when the church is going, downhill from better days. A Revival is needed, getting back to first love by following Jesus and not self or false leaders. Don't be lukewarm in your relationship with God and others. Hello, it’s me again with some things to talk about in this double issue! (Well it’s just two different topics in one article!) My first is, yes, I started middle school last Thursday. I have to say it was pretty awesome starting middle school because you see all your friends and you don’t have to sit in the same class every day and all day. I mean who likes having the same surroundings every day? Well I do have to admit elementary school was really fun at the good parts. On my first day of middle school all the teachers laid out a red carpet and stood on the sides to high five the students as they walked by. It was pretty fun and amusing. My middle school building is only one story, so with only one floor, it is easy to get to classes on time. It is also easy because sixth grade is all in one hallway, seventh is one, and eighth is one. That way bullying happens way less than schools that have classes everywhere and students all mixed up. Okay, now last weekend I had a soccer tournament where we were the champions! I had a lot of assists and one goal, here I will tell you about it. (It was an awesome goal!) Okay, so I am running down the field, we have the ball, the ball is passed to me, I pass it back, my teammate crosses the ball to me, it bounces and I swing my left foot, its going toward the goal… I scored! That was awesome right? The tournament we were in was called the Midwest Kickoff Classic. It is a tournament at the beginning of the season to kickoff the fall season. We played at the Overland Park soccer complex. I had a lot of fun with my team Kansas Rush! Yeah, as you can see I had a long weekend and a good week. Until next time! Gabriel Pro Confessions of a Pudgy Prairie Gal In the last column, we talked about setting goals for the new school year. What are some of those goals? How can you help your child(ren) accomplish those goals and feel good about himself/herself? Certainly, one of the goals is to do your best. That doesn’t mean every child makes an “A” in every class. It means every child develops selfdiscipline and succeeds as much as possible. Set up a success chart. Check off the homework when it is completed. Give stars for successful reports. Make a visual reminder that school is all about learning and sets a foundation for the future. Another goal might be to find a way to be nice to new students. Being the new kid in the classroom is scary. Teach your children to befriend the Pearl Harbor Summer Savings Sale TOOL SALE 25% OFF With this Ad & a $25 Purchase (Not included in Gift Card promotion) Wheat Cents $3.50 per roll FREE $10 Gift Card with $35 purchase We Buy Old Car or Truck Batteries $7.00 and up each We buy Silver Plate and Silverware Craftsman Sockets $1.00 each - no limit New Kids on the Block Collection 8x10s, Etc. Buying & Selling Costume Jewelry We Buy Gold & Silver Ad Good Thru 8-31-2013 1 Bedroom Unit for $567.00-$697 per month with a deposit of $99.00 2 Bedroom Apartments for $677.00 a month with a deposit of $99.00 1 866 973-0326 Our Special Ends Sep. 30, 2013 (Continued from Page 1) made three of the biggest mistakes an attack force could ever make, or God was taking care of America. Which do you think it was?" Shocked and surprised, the young helmsman asked, "What do mean by saying the Japanese made the three biggest mistakes an attack force ever made?" Nimitz explained: Mistake number one: the Japanese attacked on Sunday morning. Nine out of every ten crewmen of those ships were ashore on leave. If those same ships had been lured to sea and been sunk - we would have lost 38,000 men instead of 3,800. Mistake number two: when the Japanese saw all those battleships lined in a row, they got so carried away sinking those battleships, they never once bombed our dry docks opposite those ships. If they had destroyed our dry docks, we would have had to tow every one of those ships to America to be repaired. As it is now, the ships are in shallow water and can be raised. One tug can pull them over to the dry docks, and we can have them repaired Event Stage (Continued from Page 1) boss, and my mom is in real estate and is her own boss. Peyton has two brothers, Evan and Taylor, and a sister Kama. The June concert opening of the amphitheater was a huge success, and the marketing was done almost solely on social media such as Facebook, which brought friends and fans of the group Walker McGuire from around the country. One of the band’s musicians, Johnny McGuire of Fairway, Kansas, is a high school friend of Peyton’s. The duo now lives in Nashville. new kids and help them become part of the group. Prepare your children for bullies. When they see bullying or when they experience it, go to the proper authorities. Then, as the parent, always be listening to your children in case a bully has come after them. Let your children create some of their own goals. Listen and support your school-aged child(ren). When that happens, we’re all successful. RJ Thesman is the author of “The Unraveling of Reverend G” – a finalist for the Grace Award. Thesman lives in Olathe with her son and an elderly cat. She enjoys gardening, reading and cooking. Her website and blog address is: www.rjthesman.net. Other helpful websites include: singlemom. com; momsense.com; DivorceCare. org. and at sea by the time we could have towed them to America. And I already have crews ashore anxious to man those ships. Mistake number three: Every drop of fuel in the Pacific theater of war is in top of the ground storage tanks five miles away over that hill. One attack plane could have strafed those tanks and destroyed our fuel supply. That's why I say the Japanese made three of the biggest mistakes an attack force could make or God was taking care of America. I've never forgotten what I read in that little book. It is still an inspiration as I reflect upon it. In jest, I might suggest that because Admiral Nimitz was a Texan, born and raised in Fredricksburg, Texas - he was a born optimist. But anyway you look at it-Admiral Nimitz was able to see a silver lining in a situation and circumstance where everyone else saw only despair and defeatism. President Roosevelt had chosen the right man for the right job. We desperately needed a leader that could see silver linings in the midst of the clouds of dejection, despair and defeat. Many Olatheans are familiar with Dr. Hadley V. Warwick, DVM, the owner and primary veterinarian at Olathe West Veterinary Care since it was built in 1984. He graduated from the University of Kansas with a Bachelor of Science Degree in Biology in 1977 and the Kansas State University School of Veterinary Medicine in 1982. Dr. Warwick’s business services include grooming, behavior consultation, as well as boarding for a wide variety of pet types including dogs, cats, birds, reptiles, and other small animals. For more information and photos about the Sticks Amphitheater, go to http:// vbartranch-com.webs.com/. Gazette Humor (Olathe woman laments the agonies of dieting and exercise, can you relate?) By Nancy Stewart I can no longer blame my apathetic attitude about my diet and exercise regimen, or a personal crisis, or my beloved canine’s declining ability to walk long distances. Let’s face it; I milked that one for well over a year. It’s been fifteen months to be exact. It’s amazing the amount of fleshly flab that can accumulate in that amount of time. Perhaps the consolation of food, (mostly decadent chocolate), went a wee bit overboard. With that realization, plus the fact that I signed up for a “wellness” program with our health insurance, I decided it was high time I did something about it. Whatever possessed me to sign up for that wellness program should be stomped on and killed. It’s obvious no one is coming out with the “miracle” pill any time during my lifetime, so it’s back to the old fashioned “push away” diet. You know, “push away” from the table. My “wellness” coach Yousphat, will be calling next week, which fills me with a panic so severe it could be considered a disorder. I have accomplished nothing in the past four weeks, since he last called and I really hate being yelled at. I don’t think he’s going to understand, when I tell him the frozen custard diet doesn’t work. Let’s also not forget that in less than one month I’ll be on the beach. YIKES! Just what I need! This white, jiggly, flab highlighted by the sun. So, you get my despair. It was time to do something on the last day of the month. I had heard good things about Dr. Oz’s “green drink” so while I was out running errands, I bought the ingredients needed to start my “new me” program the next morning with his nutritious, energizing drink. The next morning after two hours of preparation, all the ingredients are in Benefit Run From Debbie Miller Benefit Run On Saturday September 7th, at 8 am, Heads Up Brain Injury Support will be hosting the 7th annual 5k sanctioned run timed by KC Running Company, as well as 3k and Kids and Heroes Walk. The event is being held at the Paola, Kansas High School track which is located at 401 Angela Street in Paola and is also the starting point for the 5k. Registration can be completed online at headsuponline. org under the registration tab or at the event on the day of the race. Race-day itinerary and information on the day’s activities can also be found online. Heads Up Brain Injury Support provides personal support & services to individuals who have sustained a brain injury, as well as their families and caregivers. The group is based in Paola, Kansas and holds monthly meetings with members from numerous counties in Eastern Kansas. Meeting times and locations are listed on the website and are open to anyone seeking further information or help from the group. Olathe People We are so lucky to have people in our community like Scouter Melvin Reece and Scouter Max Waddell who have helped with Scouting for over 40 years. A Cruise If you d on’t get seasick, or even if you do, you owe it to yourself to go on a cruise, at least once. Most folks will tell you it was a great experience. There are bargains out there, lots of them. Shop around. Avoid Carnival and Costa, they have had lots of problems. Costa flipped a ship on its side hot rodding and Carnival has gotten some people sick and suffered break downs. Nancy Stewart the blender. Whir, whir, whir, we go. Wow. That’s thick. You can’t drink that. You need a spoon. It’s supposed to be a drink. As my uncle would say, “It looks like it done been ate once.” I add water, pour and serve. Oh, my precious Lord and Savior, call me home now! Gag!!!!!!! Dr. Oz’s “green drink” is now spewed out all over my kitchen. It covers the cabinets, the appliances, and the floor. Like Jonah and the whale, I have rid myself of the foreign matter within. Heaving heavily, I don’t know whether to go to the porcelain throne to continue the eradication process or go outside and allow the grass to camouflage the horrid concoction. What a waste of perfectly good fruits and vegetables. Some things just aren’t meant to be mixed. The mock split pea soup is poured down the drain and I suspect it will clean the pipes as it goes. All I need now is the Pepto Bismol. Here’s one more thing I can tell Coach Yousphat that doesn’t work. Goodness, I really need some chocolate to get this taste out of my mouth. Note: Nancy Stewart is an Olathe wife, mom and free lance humorist who loves comedy writer Erma Bombeck. New Drone City Florida Launches Drone Warfare Against Mosquitoes ` By Jordan Valinsky Mosquitoes’ worst nightmare. Hey, it looks like we found something useful to do with drones besides serving lukewarm sushi to unsuspecting customers. City officials in the Florida Keys are testing using the unmanned aerial vehicles to track down and take out the flying devils, a.k.a. mosquitoes. In case you’re imagining drones shooting lasers, the flying robots will be equipped with infrared cameras to locate areas where mosquitoes like to socialize, such as shallow-water pools. Once those places are targeted, a ground team will swoop in to obliterate the mosquitoes with poison. If you needed another reason to avoid Florida, there are over 40 types of mosquitoes in the Keys that transmit several terrifying diseases like malaria, dengue fever and dog heartworm. The two-pound drones are capable of flying for up to 90 minutes without being recharged. District Director Michael Doyle explained that the mosquitoes can run, but they can’t hide. “If we can find the water, we can kill the mosquitoes. The real challenge is finding the water quickly enough,” he said. New Theater Restaurant coming attractions are Dyan Cannon in The Fox on the Fairway Aug. 29- Nov 3; George Wendt (Cheers) in Never Too Late Nov. 6 - Jan. 19; Judge Reinhold in Harvey Jan. 22-April 6; Connie Stevens in Miracle on South Division Street April 9-June 15; and Smokey Joe’s Café June 19-Aug. 24; plus Songs of Lieber and Stoller to finish up the season. Call 649-SHOW (7469) for season tickets. September 1, 2013 Organize Your Morning Routine For some families, mornings are the best time of day. The children are happy and refreshed after a good night's rest and ready to interact positively with the world around them. For others, it can be a time when chaos reigns, tempers flare and tears flow. According to Barbara K. Polland, professor of child and adolescent development at California State University, Northridge, Calif., and author of No Directions on the Package: Questions and Answers for Parents With Children From Birth to Age 12 difficulties in getting children ready in the morning span both cultures and continents. She has heard parents express similar frustrations in all parts of the world. Planning Is Key Problems in the morning are often rooted in the fact that things should have been done the night before. "Backpacks should be at the front door and clothes should be laid out," Johnson’s County Gazette says Polland. Check school bags the evening before. Keep copies of the school's monthly calendar to ensure you send appropriate gear for special events and makes sure that library books, permission slips and gym clothes are packed the night before. "Planning is the key factor," says Cynthia Kennedy Reedy, a professor and expert in child development and family relations at Arcadia University in suburban Philadelphia, Pa. "Lunches should be made the evening before, with the child assisting in this process. Clothing should be discussed with two outfits as possibilities laid out for the next day." Allowing children to choose their own clothes can be a challenge for some parents who have a keen sense of style. "No teacher, principal or other child will pass judgment if your child shows up at school in plaids and stripes that don't match," says Polland. "It doesn't matter." Reedy stresses that autonomy is a huge issue for school-age children, and it is important to give children the opportunity to make choices. Polland agrees, pointing out that giving children a sense of autonomy increases how capable they feel in their daily lives. Source: www.family.com Grace’s Goodies These recipes are ones used by 66 year long Olathe resident, Grace Armstrong Moody, (Mother, Grandmother, Great Grandmother, Aunt, Sister and Dear Friend) over the years and fondly remembered by her family and friends as some of their favorites. Grace learned to cook from her mother while living on the farm as a girl in Columbus, Kansas, and continued to cook for her husband, Edward, former Olathe Mayor, and their daughters Ann, Charlene and Alice. She has entered and won several Grange cookie, pie and cake contests. Her pies have been known to bring up to $140 at a charitible auction. Grace’s Recipes Will Return In Our Next Issue Water Rescue Training Takes A Serious Turn From Captain Eric Barnum Around 9:30 one recent morning, Firefighters from Olathe Fire Department’s Water Rescue Team were training with the Overland Park Police Department’s Dive Team at Lake Olathe when shouts for help notified them of a real life emergency situation near 625 Lakeshore Drive. While fishing on the lake, a two-year-old boy fell from a johnboat and his father jumped in to help. Their runaway boat was noticed by other fishermen on the water who notified the emergency crews in training and then sped towards those in trouble to offer assistance. The fire department deployed two rescue boats with specially trained water rescue technicians. Fire Captain Eric Barnum stated “it was great that the child was wearing a life jacket, because without one kids don’t float.” After being assisted to shore safely, the father and child were evaluated by firefighter paramedics. Neither required transport to the hospital. Chamber Lunch The next Olathe Chamber Business Lunch Series is Friday, Sept. 6! Focused on Bioscience, this luncheon – the third in the series – will be held at K-State Olathe from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Panelists include representatives from Kansas City Area Life Sciences Institute, Novita Therapeutics, University of Kansas Cancer Center and KansasBio. Olathe ACT Among Tops in USA From Chuck Kurtz View from the Midwest Blog ACT scores for Olathe students in 2013 continued to be higher than the average scores in Kansas as well as the nation, according to the Olathe School District. More than 76 percent of the students inside the Olathe School District took the test and averaged a 23.7 composite score. The state average was 21.8 and the national average was 20.9. “We are very pleased with student performance on the ACT exam,” Deputy Superintendent Alison Banikowski said in a statement. “This positive result is a testament to outstanding educators, wonderful support from family, and students who apply themselves to the task of learning. We are proud of these results.” Olathe East students averaged the highest with a 24.6 average and were followed by Olathe Northwest (23.9), Olathe South (23.5) and Olathe North (22.6). Since 2007-08, the composite ACT scores in Olathe have either increased or stayed steady. Five students also had a perfect 36 this year in Olathe. Stop and Frisk to Be Banned Former Mayor Giuliani turned New York City around after decades of crime. Now they want to revert to lawlessness in the name of political correctness. Some will die because of this insanity. New York City has been off and off the crime capital of the nation. If it wasn’t muggings, rapes and murders, it was the Wall Street Scandals of bungled bundled mortgages with firms bankrupting and laying off thousands. Now they want to get rid of Stop and Frisk. This measure made New York City almost safe again and now they want to get rid of it. If they do, be very, very careful when going there. The life you save may be your own. I’ll think twice about going there if they stop the crime preventing procedures. Grace Moody Listen Well (Continued from Page 1) yourself if you take the ear-buds out occasionally, and take the time to say, "Hi," to someone. Sure, they may look at you weird (or think you're hitting on them, and hey, maybe you are, because she's cute), but who cares, you tried! On the flip-side, you may have just met your new best-friend, or your future spouse. We could all stand to be a little more others-oriented. 4) You'll actually remember their name... One of my largest obstacles in college was remembering the names of everyone I met...and I met A LOT of people. My Facebook "friends-list" went from 300 to nearly 1300 during my time at K-State. Can you imagine shaking the hands of nearly 1,000 people, adding them on Facebook, and then forgetting their names? Well, I've totally done it. And it's awful-the awkwardness of saying, "Hey, so I totally know you from somewhere... but I have no idea what your name is..." Not to mention, it's rude. Thankfully, I'm working on it, so the next time I meet you, hopefully I'll remember your name! Today, I met a guy named Dillon that works with Cru at Johnson County Community College. Hi, Dillon! 5) People will actually want to listen to you. Don't let this be the only reason you listen to others, but it's certainly a positive side-effect. If you have taken the time to authentically care about another, the likely result is reciprocation. This is where real Olathe’s Hometown Community Newspaper for 35 Years Timesaving Tips For Busy Moms 1. Get Organized. It’s amazing how many people spin their wheels each day looking for lost keys, phone numbers, the red shirt or a specific pair of shoes. Spend a weekend getting yourself organized. 2. Find Your Timewasters. Keep track for one week of all the ways you waste time. Do you spend 10 minutes finding your keys? If so, make a key hook by your door, and use it. Do you forget “that one item” when you go to the store? Keep a list on your refrigerator and, each time you empty something, add it to the list. 3. Write Things Down. Always, keep a small notepad on hand. When you think of something you need to do, jot down a reminder. This will save you endless minutes recalling just what you were supposed to do. 4. Get An Engagement Calendar. Get a calendar to write down all your engagements, addresses and phone numbers. By keeping all the information in one place, you won’t have to dig for it later. 5. Keep A Notepad By Your Phone. How many times have you written a note on a loose piece of paper, never to see it again? Record those notes on a pad of paper to keep them from walking away. 6. Designate Days. Choose a day or night to do your grocery shopping and errand running each week. Choose a day to clean your home. Stick to your schedule and forget about these responsibilities the rest of the week. Source:www.ivillage.com Changeable Carryall Tins Need a handy place to stash lunch money, notes, or other small but important items? These personalized, changeable tins are just the thing. CRAFT MATERIALS: Small, empty metal box, such as the kind Altoids mints come in Paper Adhesive-backed magnetic sheet Colored pencils or markers 1. Trace the top of the tin onto both the paper and the magnetic sheet, then draw and color a design on the paper. 2. Cut out both shapes, remove the backing from the magnet, and stick the drawing to it. 3. Set the decorated magnet on the top of the tin, then fill the tin with all those very important things. Craft glue Small craft foam flowers and geometric shapes (sold by the package in many craft stores) Brass paper fastener 2 strong magnets 1. Cut a 9-inch square from the craft foam, using craft scissors or pinking shears to create a decorative edge. 2. Place the square on a flat surface and fold two opposite corners to the center, as shown. Fold up the lower corner so the edges slightly overlap the side flaps. While pinching the 3 folded flaps together with one hand, secure them from the inside of the pocket with packing tape. 3. Apply glue between the overlapped edges and place a heavy book on top of the envelope to keep them flat while they’re drying. 4. When the glue is dry, attach decorative foam shapes to the front of the envelope with a brass fastener. 5. Glue the magnets to the back of the envelope, one at the top and one at the bottom, and let the glue dry completely before packing the pouch. Source: www.familyfun.com Locker Pockets These simple magnetic foam envelopes are great for storing assorted school supplies and CDs. CRAFT MATERIALS: Craft foam Craft scissors or pinking shears Packing tape Annual Sweet 6 Contest Old Settlers in Olathe businesses to help raise money for the Scholarship Fund. Information on these events will be posted on the OJSL website as details are finalized. Over 150 women in the Olathe community participate in OJSL. These women give their time, talents and resources to a multitude of service projects, including: - Community Children’s Theatre - Girls Day Out (Scholarship Fundraiser) - Mainstreet USA - Mother to Mother - Nursing Home Bingo - Olathe Community Theatre Association - Play on the Prairie at Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm Salvation Army Bell Ringers High School Senior Scholarships - And, of course, Sweet 6 From Amy Garton The Olathe Junior Service League (OJSL) will host the annual Sweet 6 Contest during the Johnson County Old Settlers festival in Olathe on Thursday, September 5 at 7 p.m. on the main stage located in the Downtown Olathe Library parking lot. This long-time tradition serves as a fundraiser for the OJSL Foundation Scholarship Fund, which is awarded to high school seniors in the Olathe area that demonstrate volunteerism in the community. "We are excited to once again host Sweet 6 in conjunction with Old Settlers Days,” said Amy Garton, OJSL Sweet 6 Committee Chair. “This event is a great way for us to tell others what the Junior Service League does for the Olathe area and spread the message of volunteerism to the youth in our community.” In addition to the Contest, Sweet 6 will host spirit nights at Olathe If there is a cause that needs attention in Olathe, we hope you’ll make us aware of the need. To download an application for the Sweet 6 Contest or to learn more about OJSL, visit www.ojsl.org. community and relationships can begin. As you take the time to carefully listen to your friends and random strangers, your relationships with them can deepen, and your influence with one another will increase. Subscribe to Justin’s blog at http:// jmeyerksu.wordpress.com or follow him on Twitter @jmeyerksu to stay up-to-date on his work. Justin is an Olathe free lance writer Gazette Humor From Kathy Crumrine I've sure gotten old! I've had two bypass surgeries, a hip replacement, new knees, fought prostate cancer and diabetes. I'm half blind, can't hear anything quieter than a jet engine, take 40 different medications that make me dizzy, winded, and subject to blackouts. Have bouts with dementia. Have poor circulation; hardly feel my hands and feet anymore. Can't remember if I'm 85 or 92.Have lost all my friends. But, thank God, I still have my driver's license. Page 5 The GAZETTE Page 6 Johnson’s County Gazette Serving Olathe, Overland Park, Gardner, Spring Hill for 35 Years “A smile is contagious.” “Success is a journey, not a destination.” Sports today is not like it used to be. Training has become a science. Strength, speed, agility are the name of the game. Win at all costs, it’s not how you play the game. Players often flirt with drugs and get used to thinking it will improve their game, with little concern for their health. Money even influences teams down to the level of little leagues. Uniforms, shoes, coaches, trainers, facilities are all affected by big money to produce a winning team. Many parents encourage their children to play sports to satisfy their egos. As parents, we all want our children to perform well in whatever they choose to do. Encourage young people to be studious in everything they are interested in. Education is the basic element to success. Many high performance athletes are often troubled with their responsibilities to society. Money is often a cause of all sorts of problems. Sports can be fun, but let’s educate that son or daughter about what is expected in life today. “You cannot do a kindness too soon, for you never know how soon it will be too late.” Emerson Can you remember when the month of August in Kansas had green grass? With all the moisture and cool weather, the trees and grass are beautiful. Remember August 2013. The New Century Airport had an exposition of World War II B-29 and other vintage aircraft on the 24th and 25th of August. The B-29 is one of only two left. There were also other old planes to see and you could even fly in some. Good job, folks. The Santa Fe Streetscape project is well done. Bravo! This is a good model for the rest of downtown Olathe. The proposed street tax (retail sales tax) should pass if the voters are sure the tax will be used for streets and not used for other projects. Should we pass a tax to paint the fire hydrants? Many downtown Olatheans often wonder why the Chamber of Commerce moved its headquarters out of the hub of Olathe. Is it to move toward the 119th Street corridor? Downtown Olathe needs help in encouraging commerce to the hub of Olathe. A hotel, nice restaurants, a regulated number of bail bond offices, payday loan offices and businesses that pay little or no taxes. The Chamber can and should help to enhance the City of Olathe, downtown included. The hot air balloon people picked a nice weekend for their show. The carnival was well attended and the concessions and craft stands were well patronized. It is good to see activity in and around the Great Mall. Maybe it will encourage more retail to take a look at coming back to the mall. School has started and children will be riding bikes and walking to schools. Drivers must be careful as children are Drivers Licenses Made Easier Beginning Monday, Sep 8, Kansas Drivers License offices in Olathe and Mission will be open on Mondays and evenings M-Thursday till 8 pm. That’s a big improvement for a place that is known for hassles. Studios Filming Outside L. A. Movies are leaving L.A. area by the reel full, these days Hollywood studio chiefs insist that filmmakers they work with take advantage of out-of- state incentives to lower production costs, which on a single major motion picture can amount to savings of tens of millions. Those savings are crucial in a franchise-obsessed era when bigbudget movies commonly cost north of $200 million to produce, while on the revenue side the DVD market has largely collapsed and cinema attendance has been generally flat over the past decade. In the current climate, most independent projects would not even be produced without incentives. Learn about law enforcement careers at JCCC’s Criminal Justice Day Sept. 18 From Chuck Kurtz View from the Midwest Blog former Managing Editor Olathe News Always wondered what it would be like to work in law enforcement? Then you’ll want to stop by Johnson County Community College from 9 a.m. to noon Wednesday, Sept. 18 for Criminal Justice Day. This is the 10th year the college’s administration of justice program has sponsored the event, which is free and open to the public. Visitors can check out SWAT vehicles, a mobile command center, K-9 units, crime analysis, bomb disposal, fingerprinting, weapons and more. Booths will be set up outdoors on the Commons Plaza at the college, 12345 College Boulevard, Overland Park, with large equipment available in the circle drive beside the college’s gymnasium. Several police departments as well as correctional facilities are expected to have representatives on hand, as well. not aware of the dangers that they are confronted with. Parents, start early by setting good study habits, sleep habits, monitored T.V. and video game use. Eating healthy foods makes strong bodies full of energy to confront school life and get the most out if it. “You may delay, but time will not.” Benjamin Franklin Have you wished you had a high school diploma? It is now possible by enrolling in the Step Up program to get your G.E.D. The old John P. St. John High School building houses a program to help those wishing to obtain a diploma. Many are deprived of advancing in their present jobs because they do not have a degree. Others cannot find a job because they lack a diploma. Step Up and get that diploma. The office at the old high school has its entrance on Water Street. It was good to see 32 local mayors speak out with a letter addressed to Congress on the immigration bill. Let’s quit bickering and wasting time to get this bill passed. We need their skills and open participation in community affairs. Many well educated immigrants await the opportunity to work and pay taxes like Americans. Many Olatheans come home during Old Settlers. Let’s welcome them as they present themselves at the information booth, the Christian Church Luncheon and the old timer’s register at the Fry Funeral Home. The American Legion will have a 10 oz. K.C. Strip steak dinner on Friday, the 30th of August. Dinner starts at 7:30. We are all responsible for global warming. There are many ways that individuals, states, communities and enterprises can play important roles in decreasing carbon outputs in the atmosphere. Individuals can limit the use of fossil fuels. States can promote the use of solar and wind energy. The need to establish a grid to transport electricity should be a priority. Communities that offer a T.I.F. program to entice business to come to their areas can put a clause in the agreement that solar panels be used on much of the new construction. This would be an incentive to a green community. If solar panels cannot be used, at least a white roof would reflect heat away from the building. Let’s all get serious about global warming. The Olathe Medical Center manager for the Express Pharmacy is Santosh Reddy, former owner of the Medicine Shoppe. When you get your prescription from a doctor, go see Santosh. He will help you. Many old customers have asked where Santosh has moved to. Classmate Roe Smith passed away August 21 in Olathe. Hayden Abbot passed away two weeks ago. He was a star Olathe & Kansas State basketball player. He was an orthodontist and sculptor of famed BB coach Tex Winter Christian Connection Cleaning Services - CCC was recently established by owner, Lorrie Trout and Co-owner Bill. Responding to the needs of the people; CCC provides cleaning services for: - Residential & Commercial - New and Existing homes - Final & Rough-in Cleaning - Lawn Care With a heart for the people; we provide professional cleaning at a reasonable price. For your cleaning needs, give us a call today at (913) 963-2544. Exodus the Movie Coming Jobless Spaniards flood in for slave wages in 'Exodus.' Thousands of Spaniards in the depressed southern region of Andalusia are queueing up to play the role of slaves in film-maker Ridley Scott's Biblical epic "Exodus", hoping for a way out of unemployment. In a region with unemployment at 35 percent, the prospect of work as an extra with a daily wage of 80 euros ($107) has sparked a rush in Almeria where casting is being held for the story of Moses and the Jewish exodus to the promised land. Two Homes in Rural Johnson County Three bedroom homes, multi baths one west of Olathe; one south of Edgerton. Go to www.ajlang.org for information and photo’s. A.J. Lang Property Management 913-782-5252 Parental responsibility Student credit cards are easy to get because parents are often obliged to back up their children in the event the child runs a little short. Even if they aren't legally obligated to, parents commonly come to the rescue and pay those bills. So parents, make sure you read all the terms, especially with co-signed cards. You'll probably be there for the children, but it's nice to know the rules beforehand. Which brings up another golden rule: Students should use the cards only for emergencies. (Pizza is not an emergency.) Otherwise they're paying high premiums for everyday purchases, running the risk of damaged credit and learning some Six money-management tips for college students 1. Track it Track your spending for two to four weeks to find out where your money is going. Are four trips to Starbucks a week really necessary? 2. Get a plan The best way to manage your money over the course of a semester is to sit down and map out a budget. List sources of income such as scholarships, loans, money from summer jobs and cash from your parents as well as expenses, such as tuition, books and groceries. 3. Good time money If you know you need to buy a new CD or go to concert or a party every week, make room for that in your budget. 4. Pace yourself If you spend, spend, spend at the beginning of the semester, you could be tapped out later. Give yourself a spending limit for each week. Stick to it and you won't have to eat macaroni and cheese every day in December. 5. Go easy with the credit cards "One quick way to spend beyond your means is to charge it," says Mallary Tytel, president of Healthy Workplaces. Use credit cards sparingly. Once you get into the habit of reaching for a Visa, it can be hard to stop. 6. Set your own credit line Just because you have a credit card with a $2,000 credit line doesn't mean you have to spend $2,000. If you know you can only pay back $500, then just spend that. Afraid you'll spend as long as there's room on the card? Call your credit card company and request your credit limit be lowered. Keep at it. Card companies will try to boost up your credit lines so you spend more. Tell them "no" each time they try. Source: www.bankrate.com Do You Remember When... ...your mother told you to clean up your plate because there were little children starving in China? ...there was a clothing store on the west end of the Dillon’s Store building on east Santa Fe in Olathe. ...an Olathe newspaper ran a “pixie” contest? Lots of Olathe people submitted Pixie drawings which were published in the paper. I expect that Marion Eisele remembers this. ...Dorothy Brenner, daughter of Judge and Mrs. Clayton Brenner, wrote and published several popular teenage novels? Dorothy was in the OHS class of 1944. ...Snappy’s Drive-In at 530 East Santa Fe? They reduced the price of their hamburgers to ten cents during the Old Settlers Reunion. ...it was great fun to take the family to Joe’s Barn in Stanley for lunch after church on Sunday? The cinnamon rolls at Joe’s were wonderful. On holidays, the barn would serve several hundred customers. ...Stanley Roth, son of the superintendent at the School for the Deaf, was selected as both Kansas Biology Teacher of the Year and Kansas Conservation Educator of the Year? He was a teacher at the Lawrence, Kansas, High School. ...Nell Bowen and Francis Tainter ran two of the nicest Antique Shops in Olathe’s history? We still own some pretty items purchased from them. ...Griff Crawford owned and operated the Ford business in Olathe? Although he had lost his sight, he could do a great job in evaluating a pre-owned automobile. ...the Julien Flaming Amos Funeral Home was operated out of a new building across the road from the old Waid’s Restaurant on 56 Highway (now Old 56 Restaurant). TRABERT-MOODY INSURANCE AGENCY Now Offering Life Insurance 36 Over 36 Years Experience 207 N. Lindenwood 764-1960 764-1963 Duane Moody C.I.C. Everybody Reads The GAZETTE 50 Expires 12-31--13 Open Now days Mon Olathe Locations: 180 S. Parker 2137 E. 151 St. 12705 N. Mur-Len September 1, 2013 bad credit habits at an early age. Consider voluntary limits Consider putting a voluntary limit of less than the card company will allow. After all, if the card is used for emergencies only, you don't need all those thousands of credit dollars out there tempting you. If a young person has a credit history and can qualify for a regular credit card, it may work out to be a better deal. (Pizza still is not an emergency.) All students and teens should remember that credit cards are a stepping-stone to a solid credit history - something of major importance to their futures. Misused, they can add a mark on their credit records that will take years to erase. Security with secured cards Secured cards are another option for teens and students. Banks commonly offer these products, which are cards where the cardholder puts money in the bank as security. That money guarantees the card issuer will be paid if the cardholder fails to pay the bills. The credit limit is determined by how much is secured in the bank as collateral. Source: www.stretcher.com Also in DeSoto and Gardner September 1, 2013 Johnson’s County Gazette Olathe’s Only Locally Owned Newspaper for 35 Years Olathe Business Directory Mortgage Foreclosure, Divorce, Probate, Wills, Real Estate, Medicaid Page 7 Rick Peck Remodeling 913 575-6887 See us on Facebook s Begin July 8 Leonard Hall 16170 W. 135 St. 780-4455 Olathe “Ann & I have used these guys a lot, Donald C. Nielson, D.D.S. Katherine Nielson-Stanley, D.D.S. Your Ad Could Be Right Here Call 782-1133 Very Reasonable Rates Folks At The Grass Pad Expires 12-31-13 “The GrassPad I-35 & Santa Fe, northwest corner, just north on Rawhide Drive offers the best in lawn and garden merchandise, discounts and advice,” GrassPad Girl Free New Olathe Maps Now Available, Call 782-1133 to Come by and Get One Call 782-1133 for Advertising Information Used by the Gazette Page 8 Johnson’s County Gazette Olathe’s Oldest Newspaper Olathe City News By Erin Vader Water Treatment Facilities Receive Peak Performance Award The City of Olathe has once again earned Silver Peak Performance Awards for both the Cedar Creek and Harold Street Wastewater Treatment facilities from the National Association of Clean Water Agencies (NACWA). NACWA's Peak Performance Awards program recognizes Olathe for complete and consistent National Pollutant Discharge Elimination System (NPDES) permit compliance during the 2012 calendar year. Silver award designations are presented to member agency facilities that demonstrate the highest standards in wastewater treatment. Too Cool to Drool Set for September 8 Join the City of Olathe Parks and Recreation Department in a community event when Too Cool to Drool returns Sunday, September 8 at Black Bob Bay. You and your favorite pups are invited to a dog-only swim to close out another great aquatics season. Small dogs weighing 25 pounds or less have the pool to themselves at 1:00 p.m. Larger dogs can join at 2:00 p.m. Pre-registration is encouraged and the first 75 pups will receive a special doggie bag filled with four-legged and two-legged friend treats. To register, call 913-971-8643. The cost is $10 per dog. Mahaffie Recognizes Grandparents Day with Free Admission Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm, 1200 Kansas City Rd., will be open noon to 4:00 p.m. Sunday, September 8, to offer a $6 savings with free admission to grandparents accompanying a paid child admission for National Grandparents Day. In addition to regular weekend programming, grandparents can take home a souvenir Grandparents Day photo frame and pick up a copy of a family tree to fill out with their families. Registration is not required for this event. Linda Johnston, author of Hope Amid Hardship: Pioneer Voices from Kansas Territory, will be hosting a special book signing at Grandparents Day. She was a docent at Mahaffie Head Lice Treatment Center Now Open Cherie Parker and Susan Truluck Just the mention of head lice makes you itch and actually finding one of the buggers on a child’s head can send parents into a panic. An estimated 6 to 12 million cases of head lice turn up in children 3 to 11 years old in the Unites States each year. Olathe now has a professional Lice Removal and Resource Center for families dealing with head lice. Olathe natives Susan Truluck and Cherie Parker, sisters and now business partners founded Heartland Healthy Heads, LLC. They recently traveled to South Florida for training and certification through the Shepherd Institute for Lice Solutions. This nationally recognized program provides education and intense hands on training in the Shepherd Method, a strand by strand lice removal technique. The Shepherd Institute also operates a clinical research center and a global outreach program to educate communities around the world to identify and eliminate head lice. Heartland Healthy Heads is now open for business, located and 1725 S Murlen Road, Olathe, KS 66062 with a 24 hour Lice Line 913-730-NITS (6487).The goal is to provide a safe during the late 1980s and used her time at Mahaffie as inspiration for her book research. Visitors are invited to participate in stagecoach rides, cooking on the wood-burning cookstove, touring the historic Mahaffie house, blacksmithing, farm chores and more. Registration Open for Fall Home School Day at Mahaffie Registration is open for Fall Home School Day, Thursday September 12, 2013 at Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm. The program offers two sessions of popular school programs, Growing Up Victorian and The Tragic Prelude. Sessions are from 10:00 a.m. to 12:00 p.m. and 1:00 p.m. to 3:00 p.m. Representatives from Kansas History Day will present how the home school community can participate in National History Day. Cost is $5/student and accompanying adults are free. Construction to Begin on 151st St. August 26 Concrete road repair and asphalt overlay construction will begin on 151st Street, from Lone Elm Road to I-35, on August 26. Traffic signal upgrades at the intersection of 151st Street and Olathe Medical Center Access Road are included with the project. Through traffic will be reduced to one lane each direction for the majority of the project due to concrete street patching required prior to the asphalt overlay. An emergency access lane will be provided for emergency vehicles only coming from I-35 or westbound on 151st Street. This will allow unimpeded access to the Olathe Medical Center from the main access road at the signal on 151st Street. Emergency vehicles accessing the Medical Center from Lone Elm Road should use 153rd Street. The project is scheduled for final completion in late October. effective treatment option and reduce the stigma associated with head lice through educating the community. Heartland Healthy Heads offers a safe and effective treatment, using non-toxic products and the best lice and nit comb on the market. Stop by for a head check and visit the education station to learn all about head lice. Free head checks will be offered through the end of September. Former Olathe and Johnson County Resident Aubree McClelland Packard is the “Angel of Tanzania” From Pat Paton An Angel will visit Olathe and Kansas City in September. Aubree McClelland Packard, a former resident of Olathe and Johnson County is “The Angel of Tanzania” in that East African country. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kelly McClelland of Olathe; she is a 2001 graduate of Olathe East High School and a 2010 graduate of the University of Central Missouri in Warrensburg where she received a BA Degree in Child and Family Development. Aubree works with some 200+ children in Tanzania and has established a community center to help the children and women of that East African country. The organization “Walk-In-Love International” is a registered NGO in Tanzania and a 501-(c)-3 NGO in the United States – all donations are tax deductible and go directly to help the Walk-In-Love programs – Aubree does not take a salary. The aim of WIL’s program is to assist Tanzanian families and children as parents struggle to provide for their children and often have no other choice than to place their children in orphanages or with other families. Folks At The Market Olathe’s Friendliest Market Place Open Wednesdays 8-noon Dennis Baked Goods, tomatoes, blackberries sweet corn, peaches, honey, green beans Closed Old Settlers Saturday, Open Saturdays thru Oct. 12 September 1, 2013 (Continued from Page 1) turned and (Thank You Lord)... there was the George Washington Bridge in front of us. Once on the Jersey side, finding our hotel was a very little problem. We checked in, asked a few questions and walked to the described bus stop where we would catch the bus into New York. Next morning we are up and at 'em bright and early. We nearly broke our arms from patting ourselves on the back. We boarded the bus, the man told us all buses end up at the Port Authority. We arrive, walked in with thousands of complete strangers, found a policeman and he walked us to the stairs that led down to the Port Authority. It is 7:30 a.m. and we are first in line for tickets at the Greyhound Bus. We will take the full tour of Manhattan, have a rest stop at St. John the Divine Church at 10:30 am and then on to the 110th floor for lunch at 11:00. But that never happened. We had a tour guide from Belgium. As we toured past where John Lennon was killed, our guide mentioned the large amount of smoke but remarked that there always is a fire in New York. As we rode past where Jackie Kennedy kept her horses, he wondered why so many people were in the street when it wasn't a holiday. We had our tour of St. John the Divine. We are walking out the front door and I am visiting with the guide since he mentioned he visited relatives on Strawberry Hill in Kansas City, Kansas. I looked at our bus driver and asked the guide if our driver is sick. His Korean skin was nearly white. One look and our guide hurried down the stairs to welcome us all back in the bus. Once inside and seated, they turned on the radio in time to hear President Bush announce that a plane had flown into the North Tower of the World Trade Center. From then on there was complete silence in the bus. Our driver miraculously inched that big bus through solid traffic moving at a snail's pace. We could have shaken hands with vehicles next to us. Our guide was told not to come back to the Port Authority. He informed them he had a bus load of tourists and was returning. We arrived to find all doors locked and all windows shuttered. They dumped us out and now what? There was one brave Port Authority person. My husband asked him how can we get to New Jersey? He said we might be able to catch a ferry, if they are running. Where is the ferry? On the Hudson River. Where is the Hudson River? Since no buses, taxis or anything were taking passengers, we would have to walk. Thousands of people were doing the same thing. We spotted five tall college boys who were trying to find a ferry and we followed them. We could see their ball caps above the crowd. We arrived at the river along with approximately 2,500 people who had walked down from the first tower. No one spoke. Sirens were screaming, horns were honking, smoke was rolling and we waited. There were many people wearing Planters Peanut shirts. Three guys quietly watched the crowds as they came toward us. They finally speculated their friends might not make it and what about their three children. One said he'd take them in, but he didn't have room, the second one said he had room. Then the third one mentioned, "Hey, we don't have jobs!" Reality was now hitting home. Their friends never showed up. Our hope of getting on that one ferry was slim. Then we saw another ferry pulling up. A woman screamed, the crowd parted like the Red Sea, my husband grabbed my hand and pulled me forward. I fell, he picked me up, and we were now much closer with a better chance. Three more ferries were pulling up, so there were five. I had tripped over a high heel shoe and a journal. As we waited, I held the shoe up high for a long time, but no one claimed it. We got two of the last five seats on the fifth ferry and were headed for New Jersey. There was complete silence as a couple hundred of us stared in the direction of the chaos and destruction before our eyes. Our Guardian Angel was watching over us. Had we not gotten on that ferry, we would have been walking across the George Washington Bridge the next morning. We reached the Jersey Shore, but had no idea where we were. There were guards waiting and said there could possibly be some buses coming along. We told them the name of our hotel, but they didn't have a clue where it was. Their suggestion was that we catch whatever bus we could and hope for the best. Several buses came but they were not going our way. Finally the bus heading inland came. He said he could only go to a certain street and then would have to turn around. We got on. We only traveled a couple of blocks when a man jumped out in front of us, waving his arms. He had a man with oxygen with him and needed a ride to a hospital. The driver had no idea where the hospital was, but a woman rider did know. She moved up front and directed the bus. We pulled into the parking lot to find several white tents and hundreds of white coats. It was a triage center, ready, but no patients to treat... there were no survivors. That man got the best medical attention he will ever see. Our bus reached the turnaround point and we had the choice of going back or getting off. We had no idea where we were, but we got off. It was a little park with restrooms, but guards with guns kept us from entering. We walked until we saw a small strip center. We both badly needed a restroom and I must admit I had even thought of sitting in the grass. Barnes and Noble was the first store and we headed for their restroom. It was 2:30 pm. The store was empty and the clerk looked in a state of shock. Fortunately, she knew our hotel and said it was about one-and-a-half miles down the road. Since I'm diabetic, Herb had insisted we buy a sandwich before we left that morning. Good thinking, because I was really in need of some food before we walked that next one-and-a-half miles. At that moment, one-half of a smashed sandwich looked pretty good to both of us. We arrived at our hotel and received a stack of phone messages. None of us was into cell phones at that time. Luckily, our daughter was at her work that had an 800 number. That was all that was working and all four children were wondering if their parents had gone down with the towers. Even the hotel clerks were thrilled to see we survived. One of the clerks even admitted he just knew we were gone and he was wondering if he could buy our van from our children whose names we had left as next of kin. We went to our room, returned all their phone calls and watched the horrible scene out our window. Then came the knock on our door saying we had to leave since our destination was southward. They had refugees who needed our room. We packed up and tried to get out of town. All the exits had guards with guns. We tried several roads with no luck. Finally, found a fire truck. They told us how to get out, but we tried three times and could not find the road. We came to an exit again and this time the police officer stopped us and pulled his gun. I rolled down the window and held up both arms. I told him we are just trying to get out of your way. He said the road we needed was asphalt and ran past a seedy looking motel. We found it, took it and were on I-95 South. For 12 miles we were the only vehicle on the road. Northbound they were stopped, bumper to bumper. The only thing moving were emergency vehicles traveling the shoulders. Of course, we had to bypass Washington, D.C. It was fully guarded with no entrance. We tried to complete our trip, but everywhere we went we were completely alone. Even Cape Kennedy was closed. There was a real estate desk open. She suggested we buy our ticket for tomorrow and hope something would be open. She suggested we check into the Holiday Inn. We and one trucker were the only guests in the dining room. There was no menu. We had to take potluck from whatever they could thaw out. No deliveries! The next morning only the Apollo was open and the whole place was covered by machine gun-armed patrols. We saw what we could and headed down the road for Punta Gorda. When we arrived, the whole neighborhood of 32 persons came out to greet us. They had been having prayer service for our survival. It is sort of surprising that we did not have nightmares after this experience. I'm guessing it was because we lived with it for so many hours, just watching this terrible terrorist act take place. It moved before our eyes from clouds of smoke, bodies dropping into the street, those who walked down from the first tower moved like zombies. The irony of this all is that the leaders of the terrorists bought their flight lessons from the guy who owned the airport at Punta Gorda. They paid him $25,000 for those lessons and didn't tell him they didn't need to learn to land until they were well into the lessons. Of course, the man lost most of his business once the world learned he was their instructor. Hurricane Charley finally blew away what was left. Editor’s Note: The above is from the book Memories that Still Make Us Smile (And preserved in our Mason Jar) by John and Jane Does of is an elder care facility in Olathe, Kansas. Published by WestBow Press. Visit them at westbowpress.com Audrey is pictured below. K.J. Langlais Selected as Fellow in a National Aging-Services Leadership Program From Dawn Downing LeadingAge has selected K.J. Langlais from Evergreen Living Innovations Inc, Olathe, Kansas, as a member of its 2014 Leadership Academy program. K.J., CEO of ELI, is a licensed administrator with more than 30 years of experience in health care leadership as administrator and consultant. She authored the book Managing with Integrity for Long Term Care (McGraw-Hill, 1997). Contributory achievements include public speaking and training, course development, international consultant for healthcare education software, product development for communication of the MDS and Care Plan reports, systems development and implementation, team building and mastery of regulatory issues. She serves on the Workforce Investment Board, Kansas Adult Care Executives Board, LeadingAge Kansas Board Audrey Wolfe writes about 9-11 of Directors, LeadingAge National Housing with Services committee, and Business Advisory Board for Kansas City Kansas Community College. 9/11 Experience September 1, 2013 Johnson’s County Gazette Olathe’s Very Own Newspaper for 35 Years Fly Me To The Moon even survival. "I think we will escape Garage Doors Last time, I discussed garage door openers. Now, I want to talk about your garage door and its needs. Since we rely on the opener to lift the door for us, too often we do not notice when something about the door gets out of adjustment. Therefore, it’s a good idea periodically to check the manual operation of the door by tripping the release mechanism on the opener. This will allow you to open and close the door manually. If the door is in good working order, it should go up and down evenly, fairly easily, and without excessive strain. If your door seems very heavy to lift, does not want to stay up at the proper height, or wants to come crashing down, it could mean that the springs are out of adjustment or are getting weak with age. If your door wants to fly up too quickly, or is too difficult to pull down and stay down, it could mean the springs are adjusted too tightly. If your door goes up or down in a crooked, uneven manner, it may mean that an adjustment or replacement of cables or springs is needed. There are other areas you should inspect periodically. Watch to be sure that each cable pulley is running straight and smoothly. If one is not, it may need to be lubricated, tightened, or replaced. Look to see that all rollers are running smoothly up and down the track. They, along with all door hinges, also should be lubricated periodically. If lubrication does not free a sticking roller, have it replaced. Also watch for the first sign of frayed cables. They will only get worse and should be replaced in matched sets before they break. Keep all nuts and bolts tight, including carriage and lag bolts, which hold the door hinges, pulleys, and tracks in their proper positions. Remember, servicing a garage door can be dangerous because of the springloaded tension on the mechanism. Use the above tips to help you know when to call the service technician before problems become serious. Do not let your opener compensate for a garage door that needs maintenance or repair. Otherwise, the opener also soon will need repair. If I can help you with any of your home repairs, please give me a call at 913-636-9190. Around The House Home Repair, LLC is a professional handyman service owned and operated by Joe Huddleston of Olathe, Kansas. Parade (Continued from Page 1) and Snow White, for example. We will also have two class reunions with entries this year. I think they are the classes of 1953 and 1963.” One of the challenges of coordinating the parade is choosing the order that entries will appear in. Sheila puts a date on each entry when it is received. If you’re the first entry received, you can be at the head of the parade. Then Sheila also works to put school bands in a better position than where they were the year before. “If a band was first in line last year, they are second this year, and if a band was in last place last year, they are first this year. I rotate them to be fair.” The parade usually has 16 area High School and Middle School bands, numerous clubs and several commercial floats. The parade is attended by between 65,000 and 75,000 people. Sheila also works to be sure that floats with music are not placed next to a band, which can drown out the sounds coming from a float. Another priority is to keep the parade moving. “If some entry stops for even 5 or 10 seconds for somebody to perform in place, that creates a gap and some people watching will think the parade is over.” Sheila also lets entrants know that she does not know where the judges are located that are judging for prizes (first, second and third prizes in six categories, plus a grand prize of $500). “The judges are throughout the crowd, watching at different points,” she said. The parade is important to Olathe because it gives a sense of community and is a reason to get back together, she said. “A lot of class reunions happen around the parade and Old Settlers events because there is so much to do then,” she said. The parade route will begin at the corner of Kansas and Loula Streets, goes east to Chestnut, then north to Park and east, and ends at Buchanan Street. Prior to the parade, beginning between 7:00 am and 7:30 am the side roads will be shut down to clear the area for the parade and for assembling of the entries. It is suggested that you come early, grab a great parking spot in the parking garage, located on the corner of Loula and Cherry streets, and then you can enjoy the rest of the day. Access to the parking garage will be shut down by 7:30 a.m. for the Parade and then reopened immediately after the parade. For entry information and application, visit http://www. johnsoncountyoldsettlers.com. Sheila can also be reached at 913-782-5551. Military News: Navy Seaman Katie M. Patnode, daughter of Jodi L. Clark of Pueblo West, Colo. and Brian C. Patnode, of Olathe, Kan., recently completed U.S. Navy basic training at Recruit Training Command, Great Lakes, Ill. DIts distinctly ''Navy'' flavor was designed to take into account what it means to be a Sailor. (Continued from Page 1) The post-war period of the 1950s known as the Cold War, between the United states and the Soviet Union, was tense enough. And now for the Soviets to take the technological lead, America had some catching up to do! - Magnetic Appeal of the Moon Can it possibly be all of 44 years since Commander Neil Armstrong and Edwin “Buzz” Aldrin stepped onto the surface of the moon? It was slightly more than eight years after JFK's speech, July 20, 1969, that more than 500 million people watched the TV broadcast of Apollo 11, sending astronauts to the moon. The spacecraft had been launched on July 16th, and all three astronauts returned to earth safely. To this day, I find myself in partial disbelief that the moon-landing really took place. Just stop and think about that remarkable feat, and our unending fascination with the moon. It is the main gravitational force that causes the ocean tides. Moonlight alone is a marvelous sight to behold. And consider how entranced Adam and Eve must have been when they first beheld the magnificence of that yellow satellite shining in the heavens. I revel in the fact that I can look at the night sky and see the moon in all its glory, knowing that God created it for mankind to enjoy. - The Moonshot Remembered Along with Neil Armstrong and Buzz Aldrin, there was Michael Collins who remained in the command module orbiting the moon. Although he never got to walk on the moon, he had plenty of work to do on the Appllo 11 mission. Armstrong and Aldrin had been instructed to gather numerous samples such as rocks and soil - and it was imperative that it all be done quickly, because time was of the essence. They wanted to stay longer, especially after they viewed the "big blue marble” (earth) peeking over the horizon of the moon. How awesome that sight must have been! Collins recalled that even a slight mistake could have meant death for each of them. He recalled the thoughts that raced through his head as he prepared to board Apollo 11 on the July morning. He remembers calculating his chances for success - or Welfare In nine US States, being on welfare pays more than a first year teacher’s salary. That is tragic, sad, and so unjust that one of the most important persons in a disadvantaged child’s life, after the parents, (if they’re decent people) is not paid a decent salary. We should be ashamed. **Welfare now pays more than minimum wage, in Hawaii, welfare earners make $60,000 a year, we are told. It seems hard to believe. They are paying welfare people to leave there with a one-way ticket, but they won’t take the ticket. Can you blame them? **If you really need the welfare, I am glad it’s there for you. 11,000 additional recipients go on Food Stamps each week. Who is paying for all this? We are! K State Extension Classes From Adele Wilcoxen Johnson County K-State Research and Extension has a number of classes scheduled for September. Detailed descriptions and registration are with our skins, or I will escape with mine. But I wouldn't give better than even odds on a successful landing and return," relates Collins. "There are just too many things that can go wrong." Astronaut Aldrin wisely kept a diary to help refresh his memory. In it he wrote that the lowest step of the module was over three feet from the surface of the moon. And he and Armstrong had to patiently practice climbing up and down the steps wearing their bulky space suits. Otherwise, they would not have been able to re-embark after their moon exploration was completed. Neil Armstrong died on August 24, 2012. He was the first astronaut to walk on the moon, but backed away from fame. He was 82 at the time of his death, which was attributed to complications resulting from cardiovascular procedures." He did not wish to be hailed as a "hero" although most Americans regard him as such. He was a former Navy fighter pilot and a taciturn engineer. And he commanded the crew that “finished the job". It was his last journey. - Aftermath of the Exploration The three astronauts related they felt a lot like Columbus going to the new world. Truly, each man had his own personal retrospect regarding the flight. Each of them had an individual drive to find out all they possibly could. Aldrin's mother committed suicide - probably because she could not deal with all of the notoriety. This was very upsetting for Aldrin. Each of the three had a feeling of "spirituality", and a stronger sense that there’s a God who created the universe. It was like the "impossible dream" that came true. Olathe writer Joann LaCerte available at www.johnson.ksu.edu, or call the Extension office at 913-7157000 September 3—Sewing for Others. 1 – 4 p.m. Free. Extension September 4—Cut the Clutter and Get Organized. 6:30-8:00 p.m. Free. Indian Creek Library September 5—Know Your Credit. 1-2:30 p.m. Free. Indian Creek Library September 9-13—Upholstery Workshop. 9 a.m.-3:30 p.m. $90. Reupholster a piece of furniture. Location: Fairgrounds. Call Extension. September 19—Field to Fork: Eat What You Like. 6:30-8:30 p.m. How foods fit into a healthy diet if coupled with exercise. $5. Extension. September 19—It’s Here! Emerald Ash Borer. Now What? 7-9 p.m. Learn about EAB in KC, and whether to treat your Ash trees or simply let nature runs its course, which means death of the trees. Free. Extension. Page 9 Page 10 Johnson’s County Gazette A Publication Of Olatheans, By Olatheans, For Olatheans for 35 Years September 1, 2013 Old Settlers Downtown Olathe September 5,6,7 Information Booth, Park & Cherry Streets, Lost and Found Items Are Brought There. Please Do Not Bring Dogs, Guns, Bicycles, Skateboards, Roller Blades Old Settlers Commercial Booths Booth # Company Products P1 OLATHE FORD DISPLAY CARS P2 SUNSHINE HOME IMPROVEMENT WINDOWS, SIDING, LOUVERED ROOF SYSTEM P3 OLATHE FORD DISPLAY CARS P4 SUNSHINE HOME IMPROVEMENT WINDOWS, SIDING, LOUVERED ROOF SYSTEM P5 FULK CHIROPRACTIC SPINAL SCREENINGS P6 TASTEFULLY SIMPLE FOOD MIXES, SPICES P7 FULK CHIROPRACTIC SPINAL SCREENINGS P8 WILDTREE CERTIFIED ORGANIC PREPACKAGED FOOD P9 TRILOGY CULTURAL ARTS THEATER & MARKETING MATERIALS P10 NORWEX MICRO FIBER CLOTH, ENZYMES, DISH CLOTH, MOPS P11 SCENTSY INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT SCENTSY CANDLES AND SCENTS P12 BLUE SPRINGS SIDING & WINDOWS SIDING, WINDOWS, ROOFING, GUTTER DEFENDERS P13 SCENTSY INDEPENDENT CONSULTANT P14 BAG-IT MICHE BAGS, SHELLS, CHARMS, HANDLES, STRAPS P15 MRS. NOAH'S GIFT SHOP INSPIRATIONAL GIFTS, NOVELTY ITEMS, JEWELRY P16 ORIGAMI OWL BY STACY BRACELETS, CHARMS, CHAINS, TAGGED ITEMS P17 HONEST ABE LOG HOMES LOG HOME MATERIAL P18 BRET'S AUTO WORKS BROCHURES, COUPONS P19 JULIE DECK AVON P20 BRET'S AUTO WORKS P21 STAMPIN' UP RUBBER STAMPS & ACCESSORIES P22 ADVOCARE WEIGHT MANAGEMENT SYSTEM P23 REBATH OF KANSAS CITY BATHROOM DISPLAY P24 BERLEAN SUNGLASSES DESIGNER LOOK ALIKE SUNGLASSES P25 REBATH OF KANSAS CITY P26 DIRECT BUY MEMBERSHIP MATERIALS P27 SIDELINE CHIC SHIRTS, BRACLETS, RINGS, FLYERS, ACCESSORIES P28 KANSANS FOR LIFE EDUCATIONAL MATERIALS P29 MY FASHION HUT FASHIONS, JEWELRY, ACCESSORIES, GIFTS P30 RON'S SPORTS CARDS CAPS, HATS, LICENSE PLATES, METAL SIGNS P31 MY FASHION HUT P32 RON'S SPORTS CARDS T-SHIRTS, HOODIES, HOT WHEELS, BLANKETS, ETC P33 MARY KAY COSMETICS MARY KAY PRODUCTS P34 BANK OF THE PRAIRIE PROMOTE PRODUCT & SERVICES P35 COMMEMORATIVE AIR FORCE CUSTOM MADE DOG TAGS P36 PAPARAZZI JEWELRY NECKLACES, EARINGS, BRACELETS, HEAD BANDS P37 COW GOODIES LEATHER,PURSES,BAGS, WALLETS, BELTS, TOYS P38 DEAF INTERNATIONAL INC. INFO ABOUT CHURCH P39 COW GOODIES TRAVEL BAGS, SCABBARDS, COIN PURSES P40 DEAF INTERNATIONAL INC. SC44 ALENCO WINDOWS SUNROOMS, PATIO PRODUCTS SC45 ALENCO SC46 SC47 OLATHE HEALTH SYSTEM SC48 OLATHE HEALTH SYSTEM SC49 OLATHE HEALTH SYSTEM SC50 RINGS FROM HEAVEN NAME RINGS, BLANKETS, WRAP DRESSES SC51 NU LOOK CUSTOM FINISHES REFINISH KITCHEN CABINETS, TUBS, VANITY, CARPET SC52 HERRERA KIRBY KIRBY VACUUMS SC53 KEY DYNAMICS CHIROPRACTIC FREE SPINAL SCREENING, BIOFREEZE SAMPLES SC54-55 CULLIGAN OF GREATER KANSAS CITY WATER SOFTENERS, WATER COOLERS L58 KLOVE RADIO GIVING AWAY RENAISSANCE TICKETS, PHOTO AREA L59 OLATHE HISTORICAL SOCIETY OLATHE SCHOOL ALUMNI DVD'S, BOOKS L60 OLATHE REPUBLICAN PARTY T-SHIRTS, SIGNS, STICKERS L61 LIBERTARIAN PARTY OF KANSAS POLITICAL LITERATURE L62 GENESIS PURE WELLNESS PRODUCTS PRODUCT INFORMATION L63 LAKEVIEW VILLAGE MARKETING BROCHURES L64 JOHNSON COUNTY DEMOCRATS POLITICAL INFO, BUTTONS, STICKERS L65 HATCH STAFFING SERVICES JOB OPPORTUNITIES SIGN UP L66 LIFE CHURCH FUN KIDS THINGS L67-67A LIFE CHURCH L68 HERITAGE CHRISTIAN ACADEMY BROCHURES L69 LL CHIROPRACTIC & ACUPUNCTURE GIFT CERTIFICATES $20 L70 HARVEST BAPTIST CHURCH CHURCH RELATED LITERATURE L71 L72 OLATHE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE MAHAFFIE FARMSTEAD L73 JOCO COMMISSION JOHNSON COUNTY GOV'T INFORMATION L74 GOOMBI'S INDIAN JEWELRY AUTHENTIC HAND MADE NATIVE AMERICAN JEWELRY & CRAFTS L75 LENEXA CHURCH OF CHRIST DVD'S, BIBLES L76 DAMSEL IN DEFENSE PERSONAL DEFENSE ITEMS L77 THE STUDIO SCHOOL OF DANCE PROMOTE SCHOOL L78 C. MICHAEL EXTERIORS REPLACEMENT WINDOWS, SIDING, INSULATION L79 BATH FITTER SHOWCASE 1 DAY BATH/ TUB REMODEL L80 CONTINENTAL ROOF COATINGS GUTTER TOPPER, ROOF COATINGS L81 GENUINE DIGITAL DISH SATELLITE TV SERVICE, INTERNET L82 GRACE ADELE PURSES, CLUTCHES,WALLETS,SCARVES,JEWELRY L83 HAGUE QUALITY WATER PROMOTE BUSNESS L84 5 STAR ENERGY SOLUTIONS DIFFERENCE BTW TAP & CLEAN WATER L85 THIRTY-ONE GIFTS BAGS, TOTES, ORGANIZATION ITEMS L86 TERRI FOX FITNESS BROCHURES, FITNESS HOOPS, PENCILS, CARDS L87 DISCOVER VISION CENTERS LENS CLEANER, SUNGLASSES, GLASS ADJUSTMENTS L88 33 CHURCH PROMOTE CHURCH L89 CITY OF OLATHE DISABILITY COMMISSION L90 FIRST INVESTORS FINANCIAL PLANNING L91 D'MARIE VINO FRAPPE, SPICES, GOURMET CHIPS L92 MASTER HC KIM'S TAE KWONDO PROMOTE TAE KWONDO CLASSES L93 COUNTERTOPS BY DESIGN CUTTING BOARDS, COUNTERTOP & SHOWER DISPLAY L94 TITLE BOXING CLUB OF OLATHE L95 L96 HIGH TECH TOYS L97 L98 L99 PRECIOSO CLOTHING,JEWELRY,SUNSHADES,HAIR ACC.,BAGS L100 PRECIOSO SCARVES,GLOWING & FLASHING HATS, BEANIES L101 NATURAL WAY CHIROPRACTIC ELECTRONIC SPINAL ANALYSIS, MUSCLE TENSION TEST L102 WATKINS WATKIN PRODUCTS L103 THERMAL KING WINDOW TRIPLE GLASS REPLACEMENT WINDOWS,DOORS,SIDING L104 TEAM BELL HOMES/REESE GIVEAWAYS L105 SEAL SMART PERMANT SEAL FOR WOOD, CONCRETE & MASONRY L106 RODAN & FIELDS DERMATOLOGISTS DERMATOLOGIST GRADE SKINCARE & BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES L107 STUDIO PBJ PHOTOGRAPHY BOOKS, PORTRAITS, TINS &BUSINESS CARDS L108 PARTYLITE FRAGURANCE ITEMS & HOME DECOR L109 ZYDOO WOOD ROSES,CRYSTAL PEARLS, SUNGLASSES, L110 ZYDOO HATS, CAPS, VASES L111 CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST LATTER-DAY SAINTS PRINTED MATERIALS L112 LEIGH'S SCHOOL OF DANCE PROMOTE SCHOOL L113 VITA CRAFT STAINLESS STEEL COOKWARE L114 CHAMPION WINDOWS REPLACEMENT WINDOWS, SIDING, DOORS, ROOFS L115 MAXIMIZED LIVING HEALTH CENTER FREE HEALTH & SPINAL SCREENINGS L116 APW PLUMBING, HEATING & COOLING TANKLESS WATER HEATER & A/C TUNEUP L117 APW PLUMBING, HEATING & COOLING L118 TUPPERWARE TUPPERWARE L119 JOHN COCKELL ENT. RADA KITCHEN CUTLERY L120 DRY BASEMENT, INC BASEMENT WATER PROOFING, FOUNDATION REPAIR L121 OLATHE CHIROPRACTIC CHIROPRACTIC & WEIGHT LOSS SERVICES L122 L123 PINNACLE RIDGE NURSING & REHABILITATION L124 DEZINER SUNGLASSES SUNGLASSES, HATS, NOVELITIES NC126 LEISURE LIVING LLC FOUR SEASONS SUNROOM, WINDOWS, SIDING, BATH CONVERSIONS NC127 LEISURE LIVING LLC NC128 LEISURE LIVING LLC NC129 COMCAST TV, INTERNET, TELEPHONE, HOME SECURITY NC130 NC131 AM ENTERPRISES WOMENS CLOTHING NC132 WOMEN'S CLOTHING SC43 AMERICAN CANCER SOCIETY PROMOTE RUN Old Settlers Crafts Booths O L D S E T T L E R S Booth # Participant C50 Michelle Avery C51 Gerald and Eddie Siscoe C52 Gerald and Eddie Siscoe C54 Flavio Martinez C55 Free to be Creations/Diana Chaloux C56 LeeAnn Younghans/Roxanne Hatton C57 LeeAnn Younghans/Roxanne Hatton C58 Julie Browning C59 Julie Browning C61 Robert Brown C62 Robert Brown C63 Jack Williams C65 Natilia Butler C66 Steve and Linda Hall C67 Steve and Linda Hall C68 Swander Photography/Shawn Swander C69 Divine Icy Wine/Phyliss Brooks C70 CJ Brokus-Rapp C71 Opal Zimmerman C72 Opal Zimmerman C73 Larry Eveler C74 Jill Yaste C75 Javier Gonzalez C76 Nicole Wall/Brittani Willnauer C77 Sticky Spoons C78 Valerie Levy C79 Build a Locket/Rebecca Bedford C80 Henry Velma C81 Mike Palumbo C82 Rhonda Manichia C83 Rhonda Manichia C85 Marilyn Bryan C86 Lee Anne Snozek C87 Kristi Hewett C88 Trish's Treasure Chest/Trish Buchta C89 Dave Ables Boards/ Susan Abel C90 Heartlain Bowtique/Megan Scott C91 Randal Brooks C92 San Man Gardens/ Sandy Wiehe C93 Sondra Kirkpatrick C94 Hoganville Family Farms/Mindy Brenner C95 Judy Heimer/ Just Nuts C96 Russell Brooks Rope C97 Keith Clark Air Plants C98 Valerie Lane C102 Gail Pappas C103 Gail Pappas C104 Yappy Hour Dog Treats/Nichole Duvall C105 Bill and Lisa Valencia C106 Charlie Santacruz C107 Charlie Santacruz C108 Gary Benger C109 Jim and Beth Gunn C110 Jim and Beth Gunn C111 Sweet Tart Boutique/Susan Kiefer C112 Sweet Tart Boutique/Susan Kiefer C113 Sweet Tart Boutique/Susan Kiefer C114 Debbie Manning C116 Kay O'Bannon C117 Kay O'Bannon C118 Temporary Insanity/Theresa Ailshire C119 Bill and Carol McMillin C120 Don Trites C121 Herbal Blis/Jeff Welder C122 Bobby Owen C123 Bobby Owen C125 Rio Jo's C126 AJ's Tees/ Glen Eberhardt C127 AJ's Tees/ Glen Eberhardt C128 Greg and Sandy Doepke C129 Greg and Sandy Doepke C130 Vanessa's Candles C131 Vanessa's Candles C132 Joy Mason C133 Joy Mason C135 Heartland Honey/ Joli Winer C136 Girl Silver/ Desiree Daugherty C137 Lois Russell C138 Tim Brennan Handpainted C139 Tim Brennan Handpainted C140 C141 It's Sew Original/E. Michele Weith C142 Forever Your's Glass Etchings/Don Person C144 Lisa Kanatzer C145 Aha Designs C146 Jewelry by Glo C147 Jewelry by Glo C148 Lloyd and Sandra Cooper C150 Cosmic Dyes/Jeff Stanley C151 Cosmic Dyes/Jeff Stanley C152 Tammy Leckliter C153 The Jelly Lady/ Judy Gutzmer C154 Tasty Mayhem/Kim Bedford C155 Tasty Mayhem/Kim Bedford C156 Beyond Jewelry/Pam Cassel C157 Beyond Jewelry/Pam Cassel C158 Jo Roe C159 Don Bartell C160 Becky Voth C161 John and Yvonne Yost C162 John and Yvonne Yost C163 Miller Leather/ Steve & Carye Miller C164 Designz/Richard & Sherry Page C165 Designz/Richard & Sherry Page C166 Victoria Hass-Buente C167 The Wildflower/Connie Robertson C168 Peacock Galleria/Erin Habig C169 Kevin Kuebler C170 Kevin Kuebler C171 Baja Collectibles/Brian & Julie Aldridge C172 Robert & Carolyn Porter C173 Cindy Silvest C174 Kevon Hale C175 Charline Dumortier Products Jewelry Wooden holiday and yard decoration Wooden holiday and yard decoration Woodcrafted items and framed pictures Hand made vintage jewelry Quilts (baby to king), table runners Wall Hangings, Napkins, Throws Specialty dips, cupcakes Handmade Fudge Handmade Pasta Homemade pickles and wooden spoons Hand knitted shawls, shrugs, pouches, cardigans and vests Handcrafted Wooden Puzzels Handcrafted Wooden Puzzels Photography on prints, canvas and metal Wine slush mix and wine t-shirts Slave anklets, bracelets, stained glass, suncatchers, etc Crotcheted top towels, scrubbers, potato bags, dishtowels Crotcheted top towels, scrubbers, potato bags, dishtowels Engraved and painted marble and granite rock Handmade childrens clothes, dog clothes, bows, etc Caricatures, frames and tubes Handmade charms and handbags Jams and Jellies Jams, jellies, bread mixes, aprons Bow's, headbands, clippies, and blankets Customized glass lockets and braclets Lawn and Garden Spoon art decor Cedar wood gift items Rare stone jewelry/ Amber, Larimar Rare stone jewelry/ Chapoite, etc Magnetic necklaces and braclets Face Painting Hand knitted ruffled scarfs, scrapbook pages, baby headbands Handmade jewelry Corian and Solid surface cutting boards Baby Snapfits, Boys custom formalware Salt Lamps Jam's and Jellies Wine bottles slumped, Wine bottles painted, scarfs Home made sauerkraut Cinnamon roasted almonds, pecans and cashews Muggies Hand decorated hats, shirts Home decor, Potpourri, etc. Home decor Home made all natural dog treats Reclaimed wood furniture- end tables, sofa tables, etc Dream Catchers, Bamboo instruments Dresses, jewelry Wood animal puzzles and wood toys Diabetic/Regular Jams and Jellies Wood work and tole painting Unique flower clips and headbands Tutu's, boutique outfits Legwarmers Handcrafted beaded crocheted necklaces and bracelets Aprons, bibs, bears, dog scarfs and coats, trash sack holders Aprons, bibs, bears, dog scarfs and coats, trash sack holders Air brush tatoo's Glass fusion-clocks, picks,windchimes PO Box banks Handmade all natural soaps, salves and toiletries Handpainted pictures on flagstone Handpainted pictures on flagstone SW Jewelry/ Laura Sharp Turquoise, quartz, agate and leather jewelry Handmade Custom T-shirts Handmade Custom T-shirts Sand art/pucker powder Sand art/pucker powder Handmade Candles & Accessories Handmade Candles & Accessories Handmade designer jewelry Handmade designer jewelry Honey, soaps, lotions, beeswax stix Handmade soldered charms and sterling silver jewelry Floral wreaths and home decor Terra Cotta Flower Pots/ Paintings Terra Cotta Flower Pots/Paintings Unique handmade sewn items, purses, totes, travel bags Hand etched glass items Black and white alphabet art letter pictures Handpainted glass Christmas ornaments Handcrafted beaded jewelry Handcrafted beaded jewelry Handpainted Crystal Nail Files, over 50 designs Tye Dye Clothing Tye dye clothing Ceramic plates, custom made with hand,feet or paw print Jelly and Jams Dip mixes, dessert mixes, soup mix Wine slush mix and cork holders Handmade hematite magnetic jewelry Handmade hematite magnetic jewelry Handcrocheted barettes, headwraps, headbands, etc Scroll saw military/wildlife, Intarsia ornaments Custom hand made aprons and quilted items Semi precious stone jewelry using black onyx Tiger eye, turquoise and jasper Handmade leather belts, wallets and other leather items Hand painted and stenciled floor & door mats Barn wood and tile pictures Heatable pet blankets, fleece dog coats Childrens clothing Beaded 7 wire wrapped jewelry Olive wood carvings, holiday ornaments Yard art Name Trains Personalized signs using ceiling tiles Jams and Jelly and pecans Stretch rings for fingers and toes Decoupage Wooden refrigerator magnets September 1, 2013 Johnson’s County Gazette Olathe’s Very Own Newspaper For 35 Years Cathy Maxwell (Continued from Page 1) Ken Carol Jason Old Settlers FOOD Booths Booth # Vendor Description F1 Morning Grange # 227 Grange pups and lemonade F2 Second Baptist Church of Olathe Walking Taco, hamburgers, polish saugage F3 Kansas for Life Cheesecake on a stick, smoothies, brishet sandwiches F4 OLATHE MASONIC LODGE Snow Cones F5 BOY SCOUT TROOP 225 Pulled Pork Sandwiches, Baby Back Ribs,C. Potato F6 BOY SCOUT TROOP 85 Rubens and Fried Pickles F7 New Vision Church Fish and Chips, Hot links, S'mores F8 Santa Fe Trail Cosmo Club Funnel Cakes F9 Liberty Christian Life Center Grilled Corn on Cob, Fried pickles,Cinnamon roll F10 St. Paul's Knights of Columbus Old World Sausage, biscuits and gravy, Chicken fingers, fries F11 Prince of Peace K of C Pan Fried Taco, home of the cheapest hotdog, breakfast burritos, Brats F12 Vista Baptist Church Ribbon fries, fried twinkies, fried oreos, fried dogs F13 Boy Scout Troop 189 Kettle corn, lemon and lime shakeups F14 Faith Chapel Assembly of God Sweet Shop and Hamburgers, Pies, Cookies F16 Olathe Jaycees Turkey legs and pickles F17 Olathe Evening Lions Hamburgers, Hot Dogs, Chips F18 First Baptist of Stillwell BBQ Brisket, Fudge, F19 Cub Scout Pack 3808 1/2 lb. Italian Sausage with grilled peppers and onions, fresh squeezed lemonade F20 Aldersgate United Methodist Church Turkey Ribs and Fudge Puppies F21 Community of Christ Church 12" Brat with all the Fixins, Arctic Lemon ARTS Boy Scout troop 88 Peach Floats, rootbeer floats, hot dogs, chips AUTO NEW LIFE PENTECOSTAL CHURCH GOOD STUFF ICE CREAM ICE CREAM ST. PAUL CATHOLIC CHURCH THURSDAY ICE CREAM & PIE ICE CREAM FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH FRIDAY ICE CREAM & PIE ICE CREAM GRACE UNITED METHODIST CHURCH SATURDAY ICE CREAM & PIE Old Settlers Parade Participants 35th Infantry Division Band of the Kansas National Guard A 360 Gym Girls Night Out AKKA Karate USA B.A.C. Horn Doctor Beverly Gossage for Ks. Ins. Commisioner Bud Brown VW California Trail Middle School Band I Drill Team California Trail Middle School Cheerleaders Camp Bow Wow Carl Stoker Chick-fil-a Chisholm Trail Middle School Band / Drill team Chisholm Trail Middle School Cheerleaders Pep City of Olathe Persons with Disabilities Advisory Board Class of 1953 OHS Cosmic Mini Golf Cottage Senior Care, LLC Cub Scout Pack 3201 Cub Scout Pack 3202 Cub Scout Pack 3240 Prince of Peace Cub Scout Pack 3250 Donald Smith Ed Everitt Farmers Insurance Football & Cheer Club of JO.CO OSHS Area Frontier Trail Middle School Band / Drillteam Frontier Trail Middle School Cheerleaders Fry-Wagner Moving & Storage Gardner I Edgerton High School Band Girls Scouts Troop 99 & 1713 Grass Pad Here We Grow Again - Olathe Heritage Christian Academy Hilltop Saddle Club Inclusions Connections Indian Trail Middle School Indian Trail Middle School Band / Drill Team Indian Trail Middle School Cheerleaders Pep and Leadership Jadon’s Hope Foundation Jared Coons Pumpkin 5K Run / walk Jazzercise of Olathe West Center Jimmy John's Gourmet Sandwiches Jo.Co. Siding & Window Co. Johnson County Democrates Johnson County Government K-LOVE Radio Karl Alpert- McCormick W6 1946 KC Spray Foam and Coatings KC Spray Foam and Coatings Kumon Math and Reading of Olathe Leigh's School of Dance Life Church - Motorcycles Life Church- Flatbed w\ Water Life Church- Kids Life Church- Worship Float / Band Mahaffie Stagecoach Stop and Farm Mainstreet Credit Union Maranatha Academy Marching Band Mayor Mike Copeland- Olathe Reads McCrackens Gymnastics and Swim School McGilley & Frye Funeral Home Mid America Nazarene University Mission Trail Middle School Band / Drill Team Mission Trail Middle School Cheerleraders Mom's in Prayer Monte Harrison- Farmall1953 AV Monticello Community Historical Soc. National Dance Champions Northeast Jo.Co. Democratic Club Olathe Alumni Assoc. Olathe City Council Olathe Community Emergency Response Team Olathe Dance Center Olathe East High School Band / Drill Team Olathe East High School Cheerleaders Olathe Family YMCA Olathe Ford Olathe High School Class of 1963 Olathe Jr. Service League Sweet Six Olathe North High School Band / Drill Team Olathe North High School Boys Soccer Olathe North High School Cheerleaders Olathe Northwest Band / Drill Team Olathe Northwest Cheer / Stuco Olathe Public Library Olathe Public Schools Foundation Olathe Schools Foundation Olathe South High School Band / Drill team Olathe South High School Cheerleaders Oregon Trail Middle School Band / Drillteam Oregon Trail Middle School Cheerleaders / Pep Club Persons with Disabilities advisory board Pioneer Trail Middle School Band / Drill Team Pioneer Trail Middle School Cheerleaders Prairie Trail Middle School Band I Drill Team Prairie Trail Middle School Cheerleaders I Pep Club Rhea Lana's of Olathe Santa Fe Trail Middle School Band / Drill Team Santa Fe Trail Middle School Cheerleaders /Rowdy Crowd Skate City Spring Hill High Band Spring Hill Middle School Band Team Bell The Studio school of Dance Todd Bleakley Trilogy Cultural Arts Center United States Naval Sea Cadet Wells Fargo Bank BANDS All of Olathe High School Bands, Drill Teams & Cheerleaders All of Olathe Middle School Bands, Drill Teams & Cheerleaders Maranatha Academy Band Spring Hill High School Band Spring Hill Middle School Band Gardner – Edgerton High School Band Crafts at Old Settlers (Continued from Page 1) from DeSoto who has specialty dip mixes; a homemade sauerkraut maker; and Heartland Honey, which is a local beekeeper from Spring Hill. Two of the most popular food vendors year after year are Grange Pups and kettle korn. “Grange pups are a hot dog dipped in a pancake batter and deep fried,” Pam said. “We correct people who call them corn dogs. And kettle corn was not in the fair last year but will be here this year.” The fair has become a family affair for Pam’s family too. The fair committee includes her husband, Bob, two sons, a daughter-in-law and a friend. Other members also include Brett and Christina Hall, Jason Hall, Debbie Hardy, Beth Zebley and Nancy Spruytte. Pam’s husband also goes with Pam to area fairs. Entries are still being accepted for this year’s fair. “I usually get about 10 calls on Labor Day weekend,” Pam said. “Our goal is to be full and have a waiting list.” If you are interested in having a booth, information is available at http://www. johnsoncountyoldsettlers.com, where you can download the application, rules and regulations. The cost is $150 for a 10 x 10 space, electricity is provided. A General Liability Insurance Policy in the amount of $1,000,000 is required, naming Johnson County Old Settlers as a certificate holder. The committee has a new carrier and will offer a policy to those vendors who do not have insurance at a cost of $82 for most vendors. Please call or email before submitting application. When emailing, please include name, address and brief description of craft. Handmade items only, No buy, resale or commercial items. For questions, contact Pam at 816-835-2391 or swbtbob@swbell. net. Renaissance Festival (Continued from Page 1) Check their website for more information. www.kcrenfest.com. We’ve known the owner, Jim Peterson, for several years now and, with his son, Will, they work hard to put together a quality and fun experience for you. And, their staff and volunteers are some of the friendliest people on earth. This place is perfect if you have kids or are a kid at heart. Advance tickets are available at HyVee, Gold’s Gym and Walgreens and discount coupons are available at Subway and Papa Murphy’s. Tinoco (Continued from Page 1) Faron Young, Freddie Fender, The Nitty Gritty Dirt Band, Chris Young, Ferlin Husky, Clint Black, Lorrie Morgan, Jon Conlee, Dan Seals, among others. He was invited to sing on the Grand Ole Opry, something extremely unheard of for an unsigned artist! He has also had his own show on the "Inaugural" Disney Magic Cruise Line. Moving from the Live stage to the Big Screen, some of his movie credits include: the "Blue Valley Songbird"starring Dolly Parton; "Mr. and Mrs. Bridge" with Paul Newman and Joanne Woodward; "Sometime's They Come Back" - a Steven King thriller; and "Kansas City"-starring Harry Bellafonte. Not only does he sing, play guitar, write original music, and act, but he is also a Professional Ballroom Dance competitor and instructor. Joe now resides in Branson, Missouri, Page 11 Olathe Ford Outlet Used Cars www.olathefordusedoutlet.com Sam Andrew Jaymie Steve PF9271A 2006 Jeep Liberty Black F3859 2005 Highlander Gold F31506A 2007 Ford 500 Red BS0186 2007 Lincoln Navigator Black C2533B 2007 Infiniti G35 Gray F3400A 2005 Lincoln Town Car White BS0169 2007 Chrysler Town & Country White $11,995 PF9242A 2002 GMC Yukon XL Gray BS0148 2007 Dodge Ram Red F3682A 2003 VW Beetle Gray B1994 2007 Chrysler Sebring Silver $10,970 BS0171 2007 Jeep Wrangler Blue $18,995 (Continued from Page 1) down the pike. So keep your seat belt fastened.” Those episodes, of course, will play off the Robertson family of West Monroe, Louisiana, who still live in the backwoods of bayou country despite the wealth they've amassed from their duck-sporting empire. A college football star who turned down an NFL offer because it interfered with duck season, Phil Robertson built Duck Commander, the momand-pop business that his son, Willie, later helped turn into a million-dollar operation with his business degree. Duck Commander specializes in topof-the-line duck calls and decoys made from salvaged swamp wood and employs half their neighborhood. While the Robertsons sometimes argue, they are religious Southerners who never curse and are always looking to enjoy life. Driving their bottomless charm is their desire to hang on to their guns and beards—no matter how much their wives protest or how famous or wealthy they become. “Hijinx is a word that I use to describe the kind of zeitgeist of their compound,” McKillop said. “But they represent some real values that people still cherish.” B2023 2007 Chevy Avalanche White $22,995 Duck Gazette Humor Seniors Traveling From Diane Hart A travel agent looked up from his desk to see an old lady and an old gentleman peering in the shop window at the posters showing the glamorous destinations around the world. The agent had had a good week and the dejected couple looking in the window gave him a rare feeling of generosity. He called them into his shop: “I know that on your pension you could never hope to have a holiday, so I am sending you off to a fabulous resort at my expense, and I won’t take no for an answer.” He took them inside and asked his secretary to write two flight tickets and book a room in a five star hotel. As can be expected, they gladly accepted and were off! About a month later the little old lady came in to his shop. 'And how did you like your holiday?' he asked eagerly. “The flight was exciting and the room was lovely”, she said. “I’ve come to thank you but one thing puzzled me. Who was that old guy I had to share the room with? Actually, some of us ask the same question every morning! where he has honed all his skills, along with his talented wife, Tamra, and daughter, Talya, to build one of the Top Acts in Branson. The "Magnificent 7" Variety Show. Currently playing Tuesday, Thursday and Sunday at 7 p.m. at the God and Country Theatre in Branson. This is their 10th Award Winning Season of Branson's fast moving music variety show with 200 costume changes! Don't miss this astoundingnon-stop-action-packed-adventure of your favorite music memories! Many ventures lie ahead, as they are working on their show to move to another Top Branson Venue for 2014, Hamner's Variety Theater, a state of the art theatre, with an amazing light show and top of the line sound equipment. Along with new music to record, and a whole host of new ventures, Joe Tinoco and his family’s possibilities are endless. Stay Tuned! F31161B 2003 Toyota Avalon White $9.995 The GAZETTE B2053 2007 Chevy Malibu White B2021A 2006 Lincoln Zephyr Sage Charity Flying (Continued from Page 1) cednth u d e /mo t R $800 s u J at w No ps No Ste $35 app fee, no util. paid, Good rent history, a must $800 deposit made in pmts. Page 12 Johnson’s County Gazette Johnson County’s Only Locally Owned Newspaper Enjoyed by Johnson Countians September 1,